There’s something deeply funny about modern investing. People will spend three hours researching the “best ergonomic office chair” because they’re worried about lumbar support, but then casually dump their retirement savings into financial products they barely understand because some guy on YouTube used the phrase “enhanced yield.” That’s how we ended up here. An entire generation of investors discovered passive growth investing, realized index funds were too emotionally boring, and collectively decided: “What if we added options strategies on top of them?” And thus emerged the strange, beautiful, slightly unhinged world of call overwrite strategies in passive growth exposure. Which is Wall Street terminology for: “We’re going to cap some upside in exchange for income and then explain it with enough charts that nobody notices the existential tradeoff.” I know that sounds cynical. That’s because it is. But it’s also true. And honestly, the more I study these strategies, the m...
There’s a very specific kind of financial pain that changes a person. Not the dramatic Wall Street movie kind where traders scream into phones while sweating through expensive suits. I mean the quieter kind. The slow psychological grind of realizing your money is technically “invested,” yet somehow still behaves like an emotionally unstable raccoon every time the market hiccups. That pain is what pushed me toward systematic income design using index options. Not greed. Exhaustion. I got tired of the emotional roller coaster disguised as long-term investing wisdom. Every financial influencer kept repeating the same spiritual mantra: “Just buy quality assets and hold forever.” Which sounds wonderful until you actually live through multiple drawdowns while inflation quietly eats your purchasing power like termites wearing business casual. The problem wasn’t that long-term investing failed. The problem was that I didn’t just want growth anymore. I wanted cash flow. Predictable. ...