This post first appeared on 8percentpa.substack.com
We wrote an earlier post on this covered call ETF. We discussed how it could be an interesting hedged play to benefit from the continuing rise of the Magnificent Seven and NASDAQ. Today, we will go through the fundamentals, technicals and valuation more deeply.
1. Fundamentals
QYLP is a covered call ETF for the NASDAQ100 (top 100 stocks on NASDAQ) denominated in British pounds (GBP). There is a primary ETF listed on NASDAQ with ticker QYLD and it tracks the index BXNT which is basically the same thing - covered call version of the NASDAQ100. Both QYLP and QYLD pay dividend monthly by writing covered call options of its constituents. Here’s the investment thesis for QYLP:
The QYLP ETF (Ticker: QYLP) is a covered call ETF listed in the UK that tracks the NASDAQ100 but overlaid with the writing of covered calls which generates option premiums that is paid out monthly. It has generated c.7% return over the last 12 months and would be able to contribute stable dividends to the portfolio while providing exposure to the NASDAQ top 100 constituents. While unrelated to activism, this exposure ensures participation in the event of continuing melt-up of the Magnificent Seven and the best run companies in the world today.
QYLP is an Ireland domiciled ETF and has the following fund details (screenshot below). As an innovative covered call ETF, expense ratio is slightly higher at 0.45%. Market cap is decent at c.USD480m (although the primary ETF has >USD8bn in AUM. The primary ticker is QYLD and there is more information for QYLD which is the ticker for the same instrument listed on NASDAQ and the USD denominated version on the LSE. QYLP is the GBP denominated version.
The following table shows the top 10 constituents of the QYLP as of Jul 2025. We can see the Magnificent Seven (Alphabet / Google, Amazon, Apple, Meta / Facebook, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla) prominently featured. In fact, the NASDAQ index represents the best run companies on our planet with perhaps a couple of exceptions. In a way, this investment idea is a hedge against missing out on the continuing growth of these greater-than-great companies. Granted the risk is that we are near the peak and should markets collapsed, we will be underwater for a while.
Performance and Track Record
The following charts show the performance of QYLP, QYLD and the QQQ indices. The Ireland domiciled, UK listed QYLP has the shortest track record and the numbers also assume that the dividends are re-invested. At 7+% annualized return, the track record is decent and comparable to the primary ETF (second table below).
The next table shows the performance of the primary index QYLD, listed on NASDAQ and denominated in USD. We can see that the annualized returns are not far from QYLP (above) at 7+%pa. That has been the case for the past 10 years and also since inception in 2013. Both indices are managed by the Korean asset manager, Mirae.
The last chart shows the performance of QQQ, one of the most popular NASDAQ ETFs and we can see that performance triumphed both QYLP and QYLD by a huge margin. For 10Y, annualized return it was 18.7%! The price to pay for regular dividend income and less volatility is c.10% of return per annum, which is a lot.
That said, let’s analyze some of the positives and risks of owning this ETF.
Positives
Participation and diversification: As alluded to above, the exceptionalism of the Magnificent Seven (Mag7) is something unique in the past twenty years or perhaps the entirety of humankind. Less than 10 companies today generate more than USD50bn free cashflow (FCF) globally on an annual basis and we have almost every member of the Mag7 generating that much. To add, apart from the Mag7, most of the NASDAQ companies in the index are actually best-in-class and might well be the next generation of FCF juggernauts. As such, I believe the risk of missing out is not small and it pays to just have some exposure via this ETF.
To delve delve a little more on this topic, since we pivoted the portfolio to focus on activists, which is inherently a value strategy, there is almost no opportunity to invest in these best of the best NASDAQ names. Yes, one activist had engaged Google and even Microsoft was targeted in the past but activist stocks are usually not compounders. So having c.5% in some of these idiosyncratic strategies is a very pertinent for the portfolio. That’s one reason why we also have physical gold in the portfolio.
Next topic, regular dividends!
Regular Dividend Income: The other attractiveness of QYLP is that we get regular monthly dividend (table above) on top of exposure to NASDAQ. The annual dividend has hovered around 11-14% which is highly attractive to dividend investors. Owning this ETF in the UK, which has no with-holding tax, is also one of the reason why we chose QYLP. Additionally, there is always a base of dividend buyers which ensures liquidity for the ETF. However, we pay a big price for this regular income. We missed out almost 10%pa based on past 10Y track record. Although I believe the gap should close the longer we hold this instrument.
Another way to think about QYLP is that rather than holding cash or T-bills in the portfolio, owning this ETF gives us regular dividends, exposure to NASDAQ and firepower to add to high conviction activist names should interesting opportunities arise in the future.
With that, let's discuss the risks.
Risks
Deviation in performance in performance: While the NASDAQ has recovered and exceeded its previous all-time high in Feb 2025, the stock price of QYLP has languished. I can think of two reasons.
The rest of the post is on substack.
Huat Ah!
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