QYLD
Global X NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF (QYLD)
QYLD (Global X NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF) charges a 0.60% expense ratio. On a $10,000 investment that is about $60.00 per year in fund fees, or about $600 per year on $100,000. The fee is deducted automatically from the fund's value, not billed separately. See how expense ratios work →
Performance (data as of Jul 14, 2026): YTD +10.8% · 1-year +9.9% · 3-year +14.4% annualized · 5-year +8.6% annualized. Dividend yield 5.94%. $8.4B in assets. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
QYLD sells 100% of QQQ's upside every month and pays out the proceeds. The distribution often runs in the double digits, and part of it is frequently return of capital, which is why the share price grinds lower across bull markets while QQQ compounds. Read it as an income instrument that keeps tech-crash downside, not as an equity investment. Compared with JEPQ, the key difference is that JEPQ preserves some upside; QYLD by design keeps none. The 0.61% fee is small next to the upside surrendered. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
✓ Who it's actually for
! Know this before you buy
Editorial opinion based on documented fund characteristics, not personalized investment advice. ETF BFF is not a registered investment advisor.
📖 New to ETF fact sheets? Here's how to use this page:
📈 Performance history
Annualized where notedReturns are price-based and exclude dividend reinvestment. Total return will typically be higher by approximately the fund's annual yield. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
How does this ETF stack up against the competition?
⚖️ Compare side by side →🛡️ Risk and volatility
✅ Before you buy this ETF
Check these boxes before buying. Good investing habits matter more than picking the right fund.
❓ Questions people actually ask about this ETF
-
QYLD's expense ratio is 0.60% per year. On a $10,000 investment, that is roughly $60.00 per year in fund fees, automatically deducted from the fund's NAV, not billed separately. What expense ratios cover, and what a good one looks like →
-
QYLD sells 100% of QQQ's upside every month and pays out the proceeds. The distribution often runs in the double digits, and part of it is frequently return of capital, which is why the share price grinds lower across bull markets while QQQ compounds. Read it as an income instrument that keeps tech-crash downside, not as an equity investment. Compared with JEPQ, the key difference is that JEPQ preserves some upside; QYLD by design keeps none. The 0.61% fee is small next to the upside surrendered. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Educational only, not personalized investment advice. ETF BFF is not a registered investment advisor.
-
QYLD returned +9.9% over the trailing 12 months. Past performance does not guarantee future results. ETF returns fluctuate with market conditions. Educational only, not personalized investment advice.
-
QYLD (Global X NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF) has $8.4B in assets under management. AUM is a measure of fund size and liquidity. Larger funds generally have tighter bid-ask spreads and are less likely to close. It is not a measure of quality or expected returns.
-
QYLD has a trailing 12-month dividend yield of 5.94%. ETF dividends are paid to shareholders based on distributions collected from the underlying holdings. Dividend payments are not guaranteed and can vary each quarter based on fund holdings and market conditions. Educational only, not personalized investment advice.
-
Use the ETF BFF comparison tool at etfbff.com/research/compare/ to run a side-by-side analysis of QYLD against similar ETFs, covering expense ratios, holdings overlap, performance history, and our plain-English verdict on which one fits your goals.
All answers are educational and general in nature, not personal financial advice. Always verify data with the fund issuer and do your own research before investing.