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Better Ultra-High-Yield Dividend ETF to Buy for Passive Income: Global X SuperDividend ETF or JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF?

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) make it easy to start generating passive income. Several funds invest in income-generating assets or use strategies designed to produce income. Some of those investments can deliver very lucrative income for fund investors.

The Global X SuperDividend ETF (NYSEMKT: SDIV) and the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEMKT: JEPI) stand out for their high-income yields. Here’s a closer look at the two dividend ETFs, which will help investors decide which is better for them to buy for passive income.

A stack of $100 bills on a chalk board with the words passive income written out.
Image source: Getty Images.

The Global X SuperDividend ETF has a very simple strategy. The fund invests in 100 of the highest dividend-yielding securities in the world. Its global strategy opens the door for more high-yielding investment opportunities while helping reduce some risk by increasing the fund’s diversification.

The ETF distributes dividend income to its investors each month. That income has really added up over the past year as the fund has paid an eye-popping 11.7% yield. At that rate, every $1,000 invested in this ETF would produce about $117 of dividend income each year.

However, the fund’s distribution payments fluctuate based on the dividends paid by its holdings. Many of its holdings pay variable dividends because of the volatility of their cash flows. Furthermore, many higher-yielding dividend stocks have trouble maintaining their dividend payments due to financial challenges. Because of that, the fund’s payments have trended down throughout its 13-year history:

SDIV Dividend Chart
SDIV Dividend data by YCharts.

Another potential pitfall is that stocks with higher dividend yields don’t tend to offer much in the way of price appreciation since the dividend payment typically makes up the bulk of its return. Because of that, the fund has delivered an average annual return of negative 1% since its inception. That lackluster return is because the high-yielding dividends paid by the fund haven’t been able to offset the loss in value of the underlying dividend-paying stocks. However, the fund has performed much better in recent years, delivering an 8.2% return over the past year and a 4.5% annualized return over the last five.

The JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF has a dual objective. The ETF aims to generate income it can distribute to investors each month and provide equity market exposure with less volatility. It does that through a two-pronged investment strategy: