invest in JEPQ rather than renting property?

Discussion in 'ETFs' started by IBRex&me user, May 28, 2024.

  1. opinion of high dividend growth ETF’s like JEPQ, SVOL, SCHD? Particularly interested in JEPQ which has 90% correlation to SPY, the ‘gold standard’. It has ~9% dividends :), it gets it from selling 1 month otm calls. Think it does have a management charge of ~0.35% but so does holding spy or qqq. So sell my rented property and investing in this rather than the typical 6% on my rented property. And super confident that JEPQ growth potential will be higher than property, nasdaq or s&p have always outperformed. Opinions?
     
  2. mervyn

    mervyn

    the answer is absolutely no. your property is yours, cash flow income. while paper money is just that, paper money. one is real asset, other is financial asset.
     
    SunTrader likes this.
  3. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Agree. Though 6% return on rental is chit.
     
    piezoe likes this.
  4. hilmy83

    hilmy83

    100%

    I personally invest in FEPI, similar CC tech etf. Currently at 25% distribution.
    100% liquid, no annoying tenants, no maintenance
     
    Badkarma and IBRex&me user like this.
  5. iprph90

    iprph90

    Screenshot_20240528_191011_Bing.jpg
     
  6. REIT has 0 liquidity, huge bid ask spreads, no options. thanks but no thanks
     
  7. FEPI is interesting. just thought what would happen if the company that manages these ETF's (incl spy) collapse? do we get our money invested in them back?
     
  8. FEPI is expensive by modern standards, 65bp expense ratio.
     
    IBRex&me user likes this.
  9. any idea, what would happen to our holdings if the company managing the etf collapses?
     
  10. Specterx

    Specterx

    Manager is legally and administratively separate from the funds. It’s pretty inconceivable that a major ETF manager could “collapse”, they just perform what amount to secretarial functions. There’s no liability mismatch or borrowed money involved, etc.

    ETNs/ETPs however do have credit risk with the issuer, so caveat emptor.
     
    #10     Jun 2, 2024
    IBRex&me user likes this.