If you bought YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs (NYSEARCA:YMAX) for its eye-catching weekly paycheck, the paycheck is shrinking.
YMAX remains a relative Buy, while TOPW is a stronger Hold after recent strategy shifts. YMAX's upside capture is now more dependent on higher volatility and slower market rebounds, while TOPW's leverage advantage is eroded in volatile or choppy regimes. YMAX de-risks capital faster, returning ~23.8% of cost in 30 weeks versus TOPW's ~19%, though both experience NAV erosion from high payouts.
YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs seeks high income via complex options strategies on a portfolio of YieldMax ETFs. YMAX charges a total expense ratio of 1.33%, combining its own 0.29% fee with underlying fund costs. Despite a headline yield near 60%, most distributions are return of capital, with total return since inception at only 17.49%.
YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs is downgraded to hold as net assets and payouts decline sharply. YMAX's high starting yield (~46%) is undermined by severe NAV erosion and a 52.9% drop in distributions since October 2025. The fund's synthetic option strategy structurally limits upside, fails to protect against downside, and underperforms market indices and high-yield alternatives.
YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs (YMAX) offers a 47%+ distribution yield but is unsuitable for capital preservation or risk-averse investors. YMAX requires reinvesting a significant portion of distributions to maintain principal, highlighting the fund's high erosion risk if distributions are taken as cash. The fund of funds approach, with volatile underlying ETFs utilizing a call overwrite strategy, which can cap upside participation.
YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETF (YMAX) offers a massive weekly distribution, currently yielding 47.23%, via a fund-of-funds approach targeting volatile single-stock ETFs. However, YMAX's distribution leads to significant price erosion, requiring substantial reinvestment to maintain principal, but total returns remain relatively respectable. The fund's synthetic long positions and call writing on volatile names drive high income but also amplify risk and price volatility compared to broader market ETFs.
WPAY offers weekly payments, with a more balanced risk profile than its competitor YMAX. You will learn the 3 key differences between these ETFs that drove my decision to favor WPAY. WPAY's use of weekly option resets allows for better trend capture and NAV protection compared to YMAX's capped upside issues.
The YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs offers a massive 70%+ yield, but faces significant capital erosion. YMAX's aggressive covered call strategy caps upside potential while exposing investors to risky, volatile underlying assets and uncapped downside risk. Despite high yields, YMAX has a history of dividend cuts and has underperformed the S&P 500 and better-constructed covered call ETFs like QQQI on total return.
YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs has gained popularity for high income and downside risk mitigation via diverse holdings and put overlays. YMAX's NAV erosion concerns have been addressed since April 2025, with stable NAV and consistent distributions supporting its income-generating appeal. I am neutral on YMAX for now, awaiting confirmation of a rebound above $12 before considering a buy, due to portfolio weighting strategy.
YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs is a fund of funds of synthetic option ETFs. The diversified approach eliminates single-stock risk. The ETF offers weekly distributions with a current estimated annual distribution rate over 45%. Traditional valuation metrics may not fully capture the unique risk/reward profile of YMAX. I believe that patience is required here.
I focus on high-yield, income-generating ETFs and CEFs for retirement, accepting higher risk for greater passive income and compounding. YieldMax Magnificent 7 Fund of Option Income ETFs and YieldMax Universe Fund of Option Income ETFs are high-risk, high-reward ETFs offering weekly distributions and total returns exceeding 25% over the past year. YMAG is more concentrated in Magnificent 7 stocks, while YMAX offers broader diversification, including alternative assets and more holdings.
I am upgrading YMAX to Buy after new data shows it outperforms both QQQ and SPY through volatile market cycles while providing strong income. YMAX's unique equal-weighted, growth-tilted, and highly diversified portfolio delivers growth-like returns with less severe drawdowns than typical option income ETFs. The ETF's performance benefits from volatility harvesting and diversification, capturing upside in rebounds and cushioning downside during corrections.