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MSTY’s $1.57 Monthly Payments Can’t Offset Share Price Collapse

MSTY’s .57 Monthly Payments Can’t Offset Share Price Collapse
  • MSTY sells covered call options on MicroStrategy (MSTR) for income. Monthly payments dropped 56% from $3.57 in 2024 to $1.57 in 2025.

  • MicroStrategy fell 53% to $171 over the past year. The company holds $5.91B in unrealized losses on digital assets.

  • JEPQ yields 9.2% through diversified Nasdaq-100 covered calls with $32B in assets. Monthly distributions average $0.44 per share.

  • A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.

The YieldMax MSTR Option Income Strategy ETF generates income by selling covered call options on MicroStrategy stock rather than collecting dividends from the underlying company. This structure means MSTY’s monthly distributions depend entirely on option premium collection and MSTR’s volatility—not on MicroStrategy’s business fundamentals or cash flows.

MSTY holds approximately 59% of its assets in U.S. Treasury notes yielding 3.88% to 4.25%, providing stable collateral. The remaining portfolio consists of structured call spreads on MSTR—the fund sells call options to collect premiums while buying protective calls at higher strikes. When MSTR’s stock price swings dramatically, implied volatility increases, allowing MSTY to charge higher premiums for the options it sells. This volatility-dependent model explains why the fund launched in February 2024 when MSTR’s beta reached 3.43—more than three times the market’s volatility.

The challenge: MSTR dropped 53% over the past year, falling from $360 to $171, while the ETF itself declined 45% over the same period. Despite paying $18.86 in total distributions during 2025, MSTY investors holding since early 2025 experienced net losses when accounting for share price depreciation.

MSTY’s monthly payments have become erratic and declining. The fund paid an average of $3.57 per month in 2024 but only $1.57 per month in 2025—a 56% decrease. More concerning, the payment structure shifted from consistent monthly distributions to smaller, more frequent weekly payments starting in October 2025, with some as low as $0.14.

This pattern suggests the fund struggles to generate sufficient premium income as MSTR’s price collapsed. While MicroStrategy’s extreme volatility theoretically benefits option sellers, the company faces significant headwinds: three separate securities fraud class action lawsuits alleging misrepresentation of Bitcoin strategy profitability, a massive $5.91 billion unrealized loss on digital assets, and quarterly earnings that missed estimates by 72% in Q3 2025.

MicroStrategy pays no dividends and recently announced it would issue $1.44 billion in new shares to secure 12 months of debt interest payments—a defensive move signaling cash flow concerns. The company’s earnings swung from $29.58 per share in 2023 to a loss of $13.42 in 2024, then recovered to $24.41 in 2025, demonstrating the earnings instability that translates directly into stock price volatility.

Investors seeking option-based income without single-stock concentration risk should consider the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPQ). This fund writes covered calls on a diversified portfolio of Nasdaq-100 stocks rather than a single volatile equity. JEPQ currently yields 9.2% with monthly distributions averaging $0.44, supported by a $32 billion asset base. The diversified approach reduces distribution volatility while maintaining attractive income levels, making JEPQ a more sustainable choice for investors prioritizing reliable monthly cash flow over speculative single-stock exposure.

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