GraniteShares launched several new funds in its YieldBoost suite. The basic idea is that the funds sell puts on levered single stock and index funds. The newest ones are industry funds and one that references long term bonds.
The funds are pretty popular with AUM that is just shy of $500 million. So not wildly popular but pretty popular.
YSPY is the YieldBoost that references the S&P 500 and SPYI is a lower yielding covered call ETF that also references the S&P 500. The distribution amounts for YSPY are generally going down as the price has gone down. Early on, most of the distributions were in the $0.18 range and now they are in the $0.14 range.
The price only return shows it has dropped by more than 1/3 since February, 2025. It's too linear to just assume that an investment on day one of the fund will be vaporized in another two years but it creates a little context that it is eroding quickly and anyone trying to build a strategy to bridge to the next financial milestone should probably keep that in mind. In real life, the fund will reverse split at some point and new money will come in unless GraniteShares ends up closing the fund.
The question that I think is relevant is whether just spending money out of an account sitting in cash will deplete slower or faster than spending YSPI's distributions. Taking the difference between the total return and the price only return and starting with $10,000 someone in bridge/depletion mode would be a little head having spent the distributions versus sitting in cash. Obviously YSPI is vulnerable to declines in the market but since it's inception, the declines have all been very short and recovered quickly.
I'm not making the case for using crazy high yielders but there is a siren's song to all of the derivative income funds. Simply labeling them as bad is less productive then understanding how they actually work before buying one.
There is a new fund from ReturnStacked that combines foreign stocks and managed futures, levered up like the other funds in its lineup. The fund has symbol RSIT and allocates 75% to SPDW for foreign exposure and uses MSCI EAFE futures to complete equity sleeve and then adds managed futures on top of the equity exposure.
If you look at yesterday's post about how well most managed futures funds have done since the low of the Tariff Panic then you can imagine that the ReturnStacked funds that use managed futures have also done very well.
I'll close out with some real portfolio stuff. The S&P 500 has been ripping, making new highs. So is that it, is the war over? More precisely, have markets stopped caring about the war? Obviously I have no idea. I added a little bit of an inverse fund in early March and then sold it early last week. During that stretch I sent out an email or two to clients saying what I always say which is that without knowing how serious this (the Iran war in this instance) is, we do know it will end at some point and then the market will start to work higher, eventually making a new high. The only variable is how long that all takes.
This time around it didn't take too long...assuming it's over as a market event. The purchase from early March was a tweak that would have grown to be a big helper if something hideous had happened in the market.
I am not convinced it is over but will be happy to be proven wrong. Nothing about how this was done makes sense to me, I don't know how you believe the announcements coming from either side and if you can make an argument for an outcome that is better than returning to how things were before it started, please leave comment. The big thing now seems to be trying to negotiate free passage through the Straits which we had before. I am skeptical that we get an outcome we want regarding uranium enrichment but will be glad to be proven wrong there too.
Faced with uncertainty it is now very easy to make portfolios very defensive without needing to sell anything which is a great offset to being wrong.
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