T. Rowe Price’s covered call ETF is designed to help investors stay in the market through uncertainty by turning some of their stock holdings’ upside into a steady stream of monthly income.
Key Takeaways:
- TCAL generates monthly income by selling covered call options on lower beta stock holdings.
- A 5% allocation to derivative income strategies can reduce volatility across conservative, moderate, and aggressive portfolios.
- Derivative income strategies delivered less downside than the S&P 500 in each of the last five calendar years through 2025.
The T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Premium Income ETF (TCAL ) pairs a lower beta value-focused stock selection process with a covered call writing strategy. That means the fund sells other investors the right to buy its holdings at a set price, in exchange for an upfront cash payment called a premium.
Those premiums add up. According to a recent T. Rowe Price report on derivative income strategies, funds using this approach typically deliver yields in the 7% to 9% range, which is higher than most dividend-focused strategies, and significantly higher than many bond funds.
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The backdrop makes the timing relevant. Heading into 2026, markets face elevated valuations, heavy concentration in a small number of large companies, and rising geopolitical tensions. Traditional bonds carry their own complications, including interest rate sensitivity and growing credit concerns.
That environment has pushed more advisors toward covered call and other income strategies, according to the report. Co-authors Michael Kubik, director of investment solutions, portfolio construction solutions at T. Rowe Price, and Andrew Wick, also a director in that group, note that their “Portfolio Construction Pulse” data shows increased advisor use of less volatile equity alternatives to generate higher income.
TCAL builds its portfolio from the bottom up, evaluating each stock on its own merits rather than making broad calls on economic trends, according to the fund’s prospectus. The fund then writes covered call options on those holdings with targeted expiration dates of approximately one to two months. It pays distributions monthly and carries a management fee of only 034%.
How Covered Call ETFs Can Soften a Downturn
Derivative income strategies delivered less downside than the S&P 500 Index in each of the last five calendar years through December 31, 2025, according to Morningstar data cited in the T. Rowe Price report.
Even a small allocation can make a difference. A 5% position in derivative income strategies can lower volatility across conservative, moderate, and moderately aggressive portfolio models, according to the report.
The strategy can also substitute for high-yield bonds for investors wary of credit risk. Writing covered calls on individual stocks can generate more income than writing options on a broad index because single stocks tend to carry greater price swings than a diversified basket, according to the report.
TCAL is managed by a six-person team that includes David Giroux, who joined T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. in 1998, according to the fund’s prospectus.
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