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iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond BuyWrite Strategy ETF (TLTW) yields 14.8% by holding long-term Treasury bonds and writing call options.
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VistaShares Target 15 Berkshire Select Income ETF (OMAH) holds a Berkshire Hathaway-inspired stock basket with an options overlay. It yields 12.83%.
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Strategy Shares Gold-Hedged Bond ETF (GOLY) yields 7.25% and rose 45% over the past year.
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A record number of retirees are deciding to retire every day as those born during the baby boom are turning into the retirement boom. The stock market has been their best friend so far, and ETFs like iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond BuyWrite Strat ETF (BATS:TLTW), VistaShares Target 15 Berkshire Select Income ETF (NYSEARCA:OMAH), Strategy Shares Gold-Hedged Bond ETF (BATS:GOLY) are still perfect for them. Last year was the “peak of the peak,” but the trend of high numbers of people turning 65 will continue for several more years through 2030.
Social security isn’t the only way their income has been able to cope with the rising bills. The stock market has been surging, and high-yielding assets have helped them get yields as high as double the rate of inflation or more. If you’re a retiree or you plan to be retired, it’s not a good idea to miss out on them.
You can play passively and allocate a small amount of your portfolio in these high-yield ETFs. You can then reinvest to snowball your holdings or cash in on the income. Either way, you’re more likely to be ahead than those sitting on stale cash.
All three of the following ETFs pay monthly.
If you want to hedge against a recession while getting paid a hefty yield, TLTW packs both into one. This ETF holds the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ:TLT) and then writes call options on its holdings to generate extra income on top. TLT itself yields over 4.4%, with TLTW’s strategy driving it up to 14.8%. The expense ratio is just 0.35%, or $35 per $10,000.
TLTW’s underlying holdings are exposed to long-term bonds, so these are very stable assets. If these Treasury bonds trade sideways or lose value, TLTW will lose value, but they’ve likely bottomed out. The Federal Reserve is cutting interest rates again, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell is expected to be replaced with a Trump appointee this year.
Thus, lower interest rates are likely to make bonds even pricier, so I expect TLTW to return yields plus some capital appreciation. Better yet, if the market gets hit with a recession, I expect TLTW to surge instead of declining. Bonds are the only “safe” assets during a recession and should rise in value, just like they did in 2008.


