
Two giants are quietly redefining what it means to invest for income. SCHD, the classic dividend powerhouse, offers time-tested stability and long-term compounding. JEPI, the newcomer, delivers monthly payouts and smoother performance through its covered-call strategy. Both promise cash flow β but in very different ways. As markets evolve and volatility rises, investors face a crucial choice: protect your income the old way, or embrace the new era of yield innovation.

Letβs embark on this transformative journey together and position your portfolio for success in this evolving market landscape!
Be sure to read through to the end to catch all the valuable insights this newsletter delivers to your inbox today.
πΈβοΈThe Quiet War for Your Dividends: Why SCHD and JEPI Are Redefining Income Investing
The Calm Before the Yield Storm
You donβt have time to chase every market headline, and frankly, you shouldnβt need to. The real challenge today isnβt finding investments β itβs cutting through the noise to choose what truly serves your goals. And if youβve been feeling torn between the comfort of the past and the pull of innovation, youβre not alone.
In 2025, a quiet battle is reshaping income investing. On one side stands SCHD, the dependable dividend workhorse thatβs been around for over a decade. On the other, $JEPI ( β² 0.51% ) , the five-year-old disruptor that has turned monthly income into an art form. Both promise cash flow. Both deliver stability β at least, in theory. But their paths couldnβt be more different.
$SCHD ( β² 0.35% ) represents discipline and tradition β a fortress built on blue-chip dividend payers. Itβs the kind of fund that has always βjust worked,β quietly compounding through every twist in the market. JEPI, by contrast, is modern income re-engineered β not content with quarterly checks and slow growth. It blends dividend investing with option premiums to produce immediate, tangible cash flow.
If youβve been feeling that markets are too fast, yields too unpredictable, and decisions too complicated, this comparison matters. Because this isnβt just about ETFs β itβs about how you want your wealth to work for you.
The storm of 2025βs markets has made one truth clear: what used to be safe is no longer guaranteed. Dividend investing itself is evolving. And the question isnβt just which ETF is better β itβs which one fits you right now.
The Veteran: SCHD and the Cost of Comfort
For over 14 years, SCHD (Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF) has been the gold standard for reliable income. With over $71 billion under management, it has earned investorsβ trust through simplicity, low cost, and a proven record. Its expense ratio of just 0.06% is nearly unbeatable β the equivalent of paying $60 a year on a $100,000 portfolio. That alone has long been SCHDβs calling card: efficiency.
Its portfolio reads like a whoβs who of American capitalism β 103 companies that have paid consistent dividends for at least a decade. Consumer staples, healthcare giants, and industrial titans dominate its lineup. For years, that mix produced not just stability but growth. SCHD investors could count on both dividends and long-term appreciation, a rare balance in the ETF world.
But in 2025, that same reliability is showing cracks. SCHDβs sector allocation has drifted dangerously off balance. Nearly 20% of its portfolio sits in energy stocks, with another 19% in consumer staples and 15% in healthcare. Its technology exposure? Barely 9% β at a time when artificial intelligence is reshaping entire industries.
The result has been hard to ignore. Over the past year, SCHDβs total return was a mere 0.61%. On a $10,000 investment, thatβs a gain of $61. Meanwhile, JEPIβs investors earned 4.34% in the same period. This isnβt a small gap β itβs a signal. SCHDβs value-heavy, old-economy tilt has missed the very innovations driving modern growth.
Even analysts who once praised its discipline are re-evaluating. Seeking Alpha recently downgraded SCHD, warning that β20% energy exposure has become a 100% problem.β Concentration risk adds to the concern β its top ten holdings represent over 40% of total assets.
SCHD isnβt broken, but itβs fighting the wrong war. Its fortress of dividend aristocrats β once its greatest strength β now limits its adaptability. And in todayβs fast, data-driven economy, rigidity is risk.
The Challenger: JEPIβs Disruptive Promise
While SCHD defends tradition, JEPI (J.P. Morgan Equity Premium Income ETF) is rewriting the income playbook. Launched in 2020, it has grown to over $41 billion in assets in just five years β a meteoric rise that few active funds ever achieve.
JEPI isnβt about passively waiting for dividend increases. Itβs built for cash flow today. Its strategy combines dividend-paying equities with a covered call overlay, selling options on the S&P 500 and its holdings to generate additional income. The result: an 8.33% yield, distributed monthly.
That difference changes everything. On a $100,000 investment, SCHD produces roughly $3,780 per year in dividends, paid quarterly. JEPI, meanwhile, generates $8,330 annually, paid every month. Thatβs $4,550 more per year, plus the convenience of 12 regular income checks.
JEPIβs portfolio also looks different β deliberately. Technology makes up 18.1% of the fund, followed by financials (14.6%), industrials (14%), and healthcare (13.8%). Its top ten holdings total only 15.8% of assets, meaning less concentration risk and more balanced exposure to both value and growth sectors.
The catch? JEPI trades some long-term upside for consistency. When markets soar, its covered calls limit capital appreciation. But when markets churn or decline, JEPIβs strategy shines β because it keeps collecting option premiums regardless of volatility.
Thatβs the trade many investors quietly prefer: smaller peaks, gentler valleys, and steady income that arrives like clockwork. For retirees or anyone relying on portfolio income to cover monthly living costs, that predictability isnβt a luxury β itβs a necessity.
JEPIβs 0.35% expense ratio may look high next to SCHDβs 0.06%, but context matters. The extra $290 per year (on $100,000) buys both higher yield and lower volatility. When youβre collecting thousands more in annual income, that fee becomes negligible.
JEPI isnβt chasing growth; itβs mastering cash flow. And in a market where income feels increasingly scarce, that makes it more than just a competitor β it makes it a strategy for the new investing reality.
Math, Mindset, and Market Reality
Letβs step back from the hype and look at what the data really says.
1-year return (2025): SCHD 0.61% vs JEPI 4.34%
3-year annualized: SCHD 11.29% vs JEPI 10.17%
5-year annualized: SCHD 12.04% vs JEPI 11.61%
Standard deviation (risk): SCHD 15.24% vs JEPI 8.74%
Beta (volatility vs S&P 500): SCHD 0.79 vs JEPI 0.59
JEPIβs story isnβt about outperformance β itβs about consistency. Its smoother ride comes from that covered call overlay, which effectively sells insurance to the market and uses the premiums to pay you. The trade-off is clear: you give up some of the explosive upside potential of a bull market in exchange for regular income and peace of mind.
SCHD, by contrast, plays the long game. It thrives when markets reward dividend growth and value rotation. Over full cycles, that patience can pay off β but in a year dominated by innovation, technology, and shifting interest rates, its defensive posture feels dated.
And then thereβs the human side of investing β the part that numbers rarely capture. Most investors say theyβre long-term, but few can endure years of underperformance without blinking. The real cost of a lagging fund isnβt always financial; itβs psychological. When a fund like SCHD delivers 0.61% while JEPI hands out steady monthly income, the temptation to switch isnβt emotional weakness β itβs rational adaptation.
Yes, SCHDβs low fees compound advantageously over decades. But the market doesnβt pay you in theories β it pays you in cash flow, confidence, and time. In that light, the extra $290 a year JEPI charges may not be a penalty β itβs the price of peace of mind.
The Investorβs Crossroads
At the end of the day, this decision isnβt about which ETF is βbetter.β Itβs about which one is right for you β where you are in life, and what you actually need your money to do.
Choose JEPI if you:
Need steady, predictable income now
Value monthly cash flow over long-term capital growth
Prefer lower volatility and better sleep-at-night consistency
Believe markets will remain volatile, sideways, or range-bound
Choose SCHD if you:
Are still in your accumulation years
Have a long time horizon and can tolerate short-term underperformance
Value rock-bottom costs and the power of compounding over decades
Believe in cyclical value rebounds and patient dividend growth
Both funds have earned their place in modern portfolios β but for very different reasons. SCHD is about tomorrowβs growth, JEPI is about todayβs income. One builds; the other pays.
The truth most investors miss is that success rarely comes from choosing sides β it comes from choosing alignment. Knowing which season youβre in matters more than knowing which fund is winning the moment.
In a world obsessed with returns, you donβt need to chase noise. You need clarity. Whether that means embracing SCHDβs discipline or JEPIβs innovation, make sure your choice serves your reality β not someone elseβs narrative.
Because the real secret to winning in this market isnβt timing, prediction, or trend-chasing. Itβs building a portfolio that gives you the freedom to stop worrying β and the income to keep living.
Ready to Revolutionize Your Wealth?
Here's what's waiting for you:
π Step-by-Step Guide: Start Investing in Minutes with Our Chosen Online Broker
π Expert Insights: Uncover the Strategies Behind Our Recommended Smart Portfolios
πΌ Easy Diversification: Gain Exposure to a Wide Range of Assets with Just a Few Clicks
π° Long-Term Growth Potential: Build a Portfolio for Consistent Returns Over Time.
πΈ Paying the bills
Refind - Brain food is delivered daily. Every day, we analyze thousands of articles and send you only the best, tailored to your interests. Loved by 510,562 curious minds. Subscribe.
The best trades require thorough research, followed by a commitment.

TOP MARKET NEWS
Top Market News - October 16, 2025
Investing in Precious Metals
Yahoo Finance provides a guide to investing in silver, platinum, and palladium, highlighting their potential as hedges against inflation but noting volatility and storage challenges.
Tip: Consider precious metals like silver or platinum for diversification, but limit exposure and use ETFs to avoid storage issues.
Ray Dalioβs Gold Preference
Investopedia reports that Ray Dalio advises investors to choose gold over Treasurys for financial stability, citing its role as a safe-haven asset amid economic uncertainty.
Tip: Allocate a small portion of your portfolio to gold as a hedge, but balance with growth assets for long-term returns.
Cramer vs. Buffett on Investing
CNBC discusses Jim Cramerβs disagreement with Warren Buffettβs classic long-term investing strategy, advocating for more active management in todayβs dynamic markets.
Tip: Balance Buffettβs long-term value approach with selective active strategies, but prioritize diversification to manage risks.
Hidden Costs of Passive Investing
Morningstar examines the hidden costs of passive investing, such as tracking errors and fees, urging investors to carefully evaluate index funds and ETFs for true cost efficiency.
Tip: Choose low-cost passive investments, but review tracking errors and fees to ensure cost efficiency aligns with your goals.
Advertise with Investing Wise Academy
Elevate your financial brand with targeted exposure to savvy investors and market enthusiasts. Join us early for premium discounts and a compelling story that lands in the right inboxes. Letβs grow together!
Partner with UsPROMO CONTENT
Can email newsletters make money?
With the world becoming increasingly digital, this question will be on the minds of millions of people looking for new income streams in 2025.
The answer isβAbsolutely!
Thatβs it for this episode!
Thank you for taking the time to read todayβs email! Your support is what allows me to send out this newsletter for free every day.Β
Β What do you think of the new format?Β Please provide your feedback in the poll below, and if you find the newsletter valuable, feel free to share it with other investors!
How would you rate today's newsletter?
Disclaimer: This newsletter is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. Please consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

