Options-income strategies like PYPY and ULTY cap upside participation when underlying assets rally, while ADX’s diversified equity approach with both dividend and capital gains distributions has delivered consistent price appreciation alongside stable payouts.

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Three funds, three very different answers to whether a high yield is worth chasing. YieldMax PYPL Option Income Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA:PYPY), Adams Diversified Equity Fund (NYSE:ADX), and YieldMax Ultra Option Income Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA:ULTY) all pay regular distributions, but the similarities end there.

ADX is a closed-end fund that owns a diversified equity portfolio and distributes both dividends and realized capital gains to shareholders. It has been doing this since at least 2000, making it one of the more seasoned income vehicles available to retail investors.

PYPY and ULTY both belong to the YieldMax family of options-income ETFs. Each fund holds a position in an underlying asset and simultaneously sells covered call options against it. Buyers pay a premium upfront, and that premium becomes the fund's income. The tradeoff: when the underlying stock rallies sharply, the fund's gains are capped because it has already sold away the upside. Income arrives regardless of direction, but the fund cannot fully participate in strong bull moves.

PYPY runs this strategy on PayPal specifically, while ULTY applies it across a basket of high-volatility names including crypto-adjacent stocks, quantum computing companies, and AI plays.

Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement

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ADX does not advertise an extreme yield, but its track record is difficult to argue with. The fund has paid uninterrupted quarterly distributions for over 26 years, including through the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic. Recent quarterly payments have been consistent at $0.46 to $0.47, and the fund also pays elevated year-end distributions tied to capital gains, which have ranged from $0.30 to $2.83 in recent years.

ADX has shown strong price appreciation over the past year and over five years. Income plus capital appreciation is the full picture for any dividend fund, and ADX delivers on both. The distribution here looks durable.

PYPY has paid weekly distributions throughout 2026, with amounts ranging from $0.166 to $0.49 per week. The frequency is appealing, but the share price tells a harder story. PYPY has experienced significant price erosion over the past year and year-to-date in 2026. That price erosion means distributions are partly a return of investors' own capital rather than genuine income on top of a stable investment. The covered call structure also caps PYPY's ability to recover when PayPal rallies, limiting NAV rebuilding after drawdowns.

ULTY's distribution history tells a story of dramatic volatility. Quarterly payments in mid-2024 reached as high as $1.42, but by mid-2025 weekly distributions had collapsed to roughly $0.06 to $0.12 — a sign the fund adjusts payouts reactively rather than maintaining a stable income policy. Current 2026 weekly payments of around $0.44 to $0.52 represent a partial recovery, but investors cannot rely on that trend continuing. The erratic pattern makes projecting future income from ULTY genuinely difficult, which is the core risk of chasing its headline yield.

Among the three funds, ADX has shown the most consistent distribution history alongside price appreciation over the past year. PYPY has generated weekly income but has experienced significant price erosion over the same period. ULTY has shown erratic distribution patterns with sharp cuts, making future income projections difficult. Each fund presents a different combination of yield, price performance, and distribution consistency that investors may evaluate based on their own research.

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

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