Escaping the Devil’s Bargain

Studies on high-yield, passive derivative income strategies (covered calls) reveal a significant negative relationship between income and overall returns. Investors who overlook this trade-off might have unwittingly entered into a disadvantageous “Devil’s Bargain”.

In this post, we will explore research concerning passive, covered call income strategies, give an overview of the derivative income category and due diligence considerations, and take a closer look at an ‘active-active’ approach deployed in a new ETF.

Derivative Income Mutual Funds and ETFs_Category Growth, 10 Years

Source: Morningstar Direct, 12/31/23

The Devil’s Bargain

A recent paper by Roni Israelov and David Nze Ndong explored the trade-off between generating high distributions and total returns. Their paper can be summarized by the old saying, “You can’t have your cake and eat it too.”

Published in October of 2023, this paper was entitled “A ‘Devil’s Bargain’: When Generating Income Undermines Investment Returns,” and its release was very timely.

The number of strategies and assets within the Derivative Income category has grown at an extremely rapid pace over the last decade. Investments in this asset class have grown from under $5bn to $74bn. The number of products has increased from 35 to 120, with new products being launched on a weekly basis. Most of this growth has occurred in the last five years.