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@BockaufDividenden I've had it on trial since the beginning of the year, as its American brother is doing relatively well.
It's the first of its kind with EU approval.
I can't complain so far, despite a savings plan at +2% and a distribution every month.
So value preservation with dividends.
As it has only been on the market since November, only €25 and the odd one-off purchase flow into it every month.
But so far I'm satisfied.
It's the first of its kind with EU approval.
I can't complain so far, despite a savings plan at +2% and a distribution every month.
So value preservation with dividends.
As it has only been on the market since November, only €25 and the odd one-off purchase flow into it every month.
But so far I'm satisfied.
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur Many thanks for the very quick reply! :)
seems to be a bit safer with high dividends than e.g:
$QYLE (I know, CC, you can't compare)
seems to be a bit safer with high dividends than e.g:
$QYLE (I know, CC, you can't compare)
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•I'm getting involved as I also have $JEGP in my portfolio and am planning to significantly increase my position. I like the defensive orientation of the fund and the active selection of around 250 stocks with low volatility. The fund volume has grown very strongly and has already clearly exceeded the 200 million euro mark. The option overlay, in which call index options are sold, adds an interesting component to my portfolio, as the option premiums generated hardly correlate with conventional dividend income. All in all, I find it a very convincing product, perhaps on a par with its US counterpart $JEPI.
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•@Index-Investor Thank you for your answer! What makes the $JEPI so different from the $JEGP, because when I look at its US counterpart, the price increase over the last 4 years has been rather meagre. Can't the IE continue in a similar vein?
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@BockaufDividenden the $JEPI functions as an S&P etf.
In addition, it is a covered call, i.e. it works via options.
Options work best in a volatile market. So you have the result that if the US market runs up, here again as confirmation the $QYLE, you get less return.
The $JEGP is the first of its kind to have the World Index and therefore more volatility
In addition, it is a covered call, i.e. it works via options.
Options work best in a volatile market. So you have the result that if the US market runs up, here again as confirmation the $QYLE, you get less return.
The $JEGP is the first of its kind to have the World Index and therefore more volatility
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•@BockaufDividenden to listen https://open.spotify.com/episode/3EqQkSXEsYJR1tdYqja83k?si=3rB-I_EsRyKbMzIl_1vjeQ here the system of covered call ETF's was well explained
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@Der_Dividenden_Monteur So either way, would you rather recommend $JEGP over $QYLE, right? So also for monthly cashflow.
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@BockaufDividenden yes.
Since you have the bigger basket here.
Since you have the bigger basket here.
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•The difference lies in the selection of equities. $JEPI contains only US equities and is roughly based on the S&P 500, while $JEGP contains equities from industrialized countries. Reference index: MSCI World. Of course, I do not expect any price fireworks. However, I also don't expect share prices to stagnate in the next few years, but rather consistent price growth, high monthly distributions in the range of 7-9% p.a. and all this with significantly lower volatility than, for example, the index you mentioned $ISPA. These are my expectations.
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•@Der_Dividenden_Monteur Thank you for the quick answers :)
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