Two of the market's most popular income ETFs compared side-by-side. See which one fits your yield strategy.
What this means: Both DIPS and WNTR fall intoTier 5: Octane. This suggests they share a similar risk profile and volatility expectation.
| Metric | DIPS | WNTR |
|---|---|---|
| Total Return (1Y) | -19.13% | 37.70% |
| NAV Change (1Y) | -56.76% | -33.84% |
| Max Drawdown | 0.00% | 0.00% |
| Beta | - | - |
* Returns include dividend reinvestment. Drawdown calculates peak-to-trough decline over trailing 12 months.
DIPS (YieldMax Short NVDA Option Income Strategy ETF) is a high-risk synthetic income fund managed by YieldMax. It focuses on generating income through strategic holdings. With $9.3M in assets under management, this fund has been operational since its inception.
Strategy: Uses aggressive derivative strategies on single stocks to produce yields far above market averages, with corresponding volatility.
WNTR (YieldMax MSTR Short Option Income Strategy ETF) is a high-risk synthetic income fund managed by YieldMax. It focuses on generating income through strategic holdings. With $76.4M in assets under management, this fund has been operational since its inception.
Strategy: Uses aggressive derivative strategies on single stocks to produce yields far above market averages, with corresponding volatility.
In the head-to-head battle of DIPS vs WNTR, the choice depends on your specific goal. WNTR wins for Immediate Income with a 71.54% yield. However, WNTR is the better choice for Long-Term Growth due to superior total return performance.
Which fund is safer for retirement income? We analyze the yield sustainability and structural risk.
What is a Yield Trap? A yield trap occurs when a fund advertises an attractive headline yield (37.63% in DIPS's case), but that income is partially funded by Return of Capital (ROC) distributions rather than genuine earnings or realized gains. This means you're essentially receiving your own money back, while the fund's NAV erodes.
12-MONTH PERFORMANCE BREAKDOWN:
Why This Matters: For retirees withdrawing income, this creates a double-whammy effect:
⚖️ Verdict: DIPS exhibits classic yield trap characteristics. Income investors should allocate cautiously and consider pairing with capital-preserving assets (Tier 1-2 funds).
What is a Yield Trap? A yield trap occurs when a fund advertises an attractive headline yield (71.54% in WNTR's case), but that income is partially funded by Return of Capital (ROC) distributions rather than genuine earnings or realized gains. This means you're essentially receiving your own money back, while the fund's NAV erodes.
12-MONTH PERFORMANCE BREAKDOWN:
Why This Matters: For retirees withdrawing income, this creates a double-whammy effect:
⚖️ Verdict: WNTR exhibits classic yield trap characteristics. Income investors should allocate cautiously and consider pairing with capital-preserving assets (Tier 1-2 funds).
The Bottom Line Question: If you invest $100,000 today, how much cash will you actually receive each month? Here's the exact math:
DIPS
Annual Yield: 37.63%
$3,136/mo
($37,629/year)
Frequency: weekly
WNTR
Annual Yield: 71.54%
$5,962/mo
($71,539/year)
Frequency: weekly
Income Gap: WNTR generates $33,910/year more than DIPS on the same $100k investment.
Over 20 years, that's $678,203 in additional cash flow (before reinvestment).
Context Matters: Higher income doesn't always mean better investment. Review the "Yield Trap" and "Total Return" sections above—you want income that's sustainable, not just headline-grabbing.
Historical data reveals how these funds behave during market stress. WNTR has delivered a superior Total Return of 37.70% over the past year.