If I Could Buy Only 1 ETF in 2025, This Would Be It

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Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are great additions to any portfolio. I use them to gain exposure to market segments where I don't have a lot of expertise or where it's easier to invest in an ETF than to actively manage that part of my portfolio.

I currently hold several ETFs and routinely add to those positions. However, if I could buy only one this year, it would be the JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ: JEPQ). Here's why it's my top ETF to buy in 2025.

Income and upside

The JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium ETF has a dual mandate. The ETF strives to distribute income to investors each month while providing them with lower-volatility exposure to the Nasdaq-100 index, which holds 100 of the top nonfinancial stocks that trade on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange.

The fund has a two-pronged investment strategy to aid it in delivering on that goal:

  • Equity portfolio: The ETF holds a portfolio of Nasdaq-100 stocks. However, it doesn't mirror that index. Instead, the fund's managers combine an applied data science approach to fundamental research to construct an equity portfolio that should produce lower-volatility returns than the index.

  • Options overlay: The fund's managers have a disciplined options overlay strategy. They write out-of-the-money call options on the Nasdaq-100 index (i.e., those above the index's current trading level). Writing or short-selling options produce income because the fund gets paid the premium (value of the option). This strategy enables it to generate income it distributes to investors each month.

The options income can be very lucrative:

A chart showing JEPQ's yield compared to other asset classes.
Image source: JPMorgan Asset Management. REITs = real estate investment trusts.

As the chart shows, the annualized income yield on the ETF's most recent payment is above 12%. That's significantly higher than high-yield junk bonds and other asset classes.

However, there is a caveat. The income stream fluctuates from month to month based on the options premium income the fund generates. That income tends to be higher following periods of market volatility because it increases the value of options premiums. We can see that in the fund's historical payments, which were higher in 2022 when the market was more volatile:

JEPQ Dividend Chart
JEPQ Dividend data by YCharts.

Given the lower payments earlier last year, the fund's yield over the past 12 months is lower at 9.9%. That's still an attractive income stream, which is important to me. I like to generate passive income, which I reinvest to generate more income. My goal is to eventually produce enough passive income to cover my basic living expenses. This fund's high-yielding payout will certainly help.