I used to think income investing meant one thing: buy something boring, collect a dividend, pretend I’m excited about quarterly payouts like it’s 1997 and CDs still mattered. Then I discovered something far more interesting. Getting paid… without selling. Not in a shady, late-night infomercial way. Not in a “passive income guru who definitely rented that Lamborghini” kind of way. I mean real, structured, repeatable income—generated from stocks I already wanted to own anyway. Enter: covered calls. And yes, I know—half of you just leaned forward, and the other half mentally checked out because “options” sounds like something you need a PhD, three monitors, and emotional detachment from money to understand. Relax. I promise it’s simpler than Wall Street wants you to believe—and way more useful than most people realize. The Core Idea: Getting Paid to Wait Let me strip this down to its essence. A covered call is what happens when I: Own shares of a stock Sell someone else th...
I used to think income investing and growth investing were like oil and water. You picked a side. On one side, you had the dividend crowd—steady, predictable, mildly obsessed with yield percentages and payout ratios. On the other side, you had the growth crowd—riding volatility like it’s a personality trait, chasing upside, and pretending drawdowns are just “temporary opportunities.” And for years, I bought into that divide. If I wanted cash flow, I had to sacrifice growth. If I wanted growth, I had to accept zero income and a rollercoaster that occasionally tried to throw me off. Then I stumbled into something that felt like financial heresy: The Nasdaq Yield Overlay. Or, in plain English, a way to squeeze cash flow out of a growth-heavy index like the NASDAQ Composite Index without completely abandoning its upside. And suddenly, the whole “pick a side” narrative started to feel a little… outdated. The Problem With Pure Growth (That Nobody Likes to Admit) Let’s start with...