$PLTY Community Creator | @YieldMaxETFs Investor | @Lakers All Day
📖 For Educational Purposes Only
🚨 Not Financial Advice
👉 Do Your Own Research
Sep 4, 2025 • 7 tweets • 4 min read
A promise is a promise. I said I’d break down the two most common options strategies, so here it is. A quick, beginner-friendly guide to the WHEEL strategy, built on two simple plays: (Bookmark this 🔖)
🔹 Cash Secured Puts (CSPs)
🔹 Covered Calls (CCs)
Easy to learn. Powerful enough to steadily grow an account. 🧵
What is a Cash-Secured Put (CSP)?
This is one of the most beginner‑friendly strategies in options trading. You’re essentially getting paid to potentially buy a stock you already want, at a discount.
How it works:
‣ SELL 1 put contract (100 shares)
‣ Pick a strike price and expiration
‣ Receive a premium upfront
At expiration:
⬆️ If the stock stays above your strike: you keep the premium, and no shares are bought.
⬇️ If it’s at or below the strike: you still keep the premium, but now you're assigned, and buy 100 shares at the strike price MINUS the premium.
📝 To sell a put, you must have enough cash set aside to cover assignment. Without it, the trade won’t execute.
💰 You don’t need to hold until expiration. Many traders lock in profits once they hit a target %, instead of waiting for all or nothing at expiry. This frees up cash sooner, so you can roll into the next play right away.
Aug 4, 2025 • 10 tweets • 4 min read
🧵High-Yield ETFs Are Wildly Misunderstood
This one’s for the confused, the curious, and the chronically loud in the replies.
If someone sent you this thread, there’s a good chance you recently diagnosed a high-yield ETF with the dreaded condition known as Scam Syndrome™.
Symptoms include shouting "Return of Capital!" without knowing what it means and allergic reactions to monthly income.
Don’t worry, this isn’t an attack. It’s a gentle intervention. And if you’re an actual investor trying to educate your friends, your haters, or that one cousin who thinks all ETFs are pyramid schemes… just copy/paste this and let me do the talking.👇
Oh hello, you.
Did someone send you this thread because you’re showing symptoms of "Didn’t-Do-My-Research-itis" or a case of "Too-Good-To-Be-True-pox"? If so, it’s probably because you recently dropped one of these classics in their replies:
❌ “This is a scam”
❌ “It’s just return of capital!”
❌ “NAV erosion!”
❌ “You’re missing out on growth!”
Look, no judgment, we’ve all jumped to conclusions before. But before you toss out the pitchforks, think you’ve got a minute for a quick crash course on these funds? Wait why am I asking. Of course you do.
If you had time to comment on a stranger’s post with 100% confidence that it’s a scam, you’ve got time to actually learn what you’re talking about.
👇
Jul 14, 2025 • 8 tweets • 2 min read
🚨 @YieldMaxETFs Attends Prestigious NASDAQ Event in NYC
The dividend kings of 2025 were officially invited to the big stage in New York and I received plenty of questions.
Why were they there?
Why does it matter?
And what’s coming next?
Here are my thoughts on all of that 🧵👇
YieldMax isn’t just another ETF company. They’re redefining income investing.
In less than 2 years, they launched 20+ high-yield ETFs, built around popular stocks like $TSLA, $AAPL, $MSTR, $NVDA, $COIN, $PLTR, $HOOD, and more.
They turned covered calls into a full-blown movement.
Jul 3, 2025 • 11 tweets • 2 min read
What is Return of Capital (ROC)?
And how does it affect high-yield ETFs like $PLTY, $MSTY, and $ULTY?
If you're investing in @YieldMaxETFs or considering it, this is a MUST-READ 🧵👇
1️⃣ Let’s start simple: What is ROC?
Return of Capital (ROC) is when part of the money you receive as a "dividend" isn’t from profits, it’s literally your own capital being returned to you.
Think of it as getting your own investment back, just in smaller chunks.
Jun 21, 2025 • 7 tweets • 2 min read
Had some time downtime with the fam so decided to create a short educational thread about the sleeper ETF that’s quietly becoming one of @YieldMaxETFs most consistent performers since April.. $ULTY
Why it might be your portfolio’s best kept secret 🧵👇
What is $ULTY?
$ULTY is a high yield dividend ETF from YieldMax that aims to generate monthly income using covered call strategies on multiple U.S listed stocks. Unlike single asset ETFs like $PLTY or $MSTY, which focus on one underlying security, $ULTY spreads its exposure across several, offering built-in diversification while still delivering strong monthly payouts.
Jun 10, 2025 • 11 tweets • 2 min read
🧵 $MSTY vs $PLTY
💬 “You’ve got 15,000 shares of $MSTY and nearly 10,000 shares of $PLTY, which one’s better?”
Both are income monsters. Both print monthly. But which one belongs at the top of your dividend throne? As someone who’s bullish on both, I put together a quick breakdown to compare the two. Just my humble opinion and personal analysis, NFA.👇
1. $MSTY = The OG.
Launched in 2023 and backed by $TSLA. This fund has weathered insane volatility while still paying out fat dividends.
It’s got tenure, it’s proven, and it hits hard.
Think: old money, war-tested general. 🪖
May 25, 2025 • 6 tweets • 3 min read
I've been getting a ton of questions lately about options trading, what it is and how to actually do it. Had previous data from last year that I used to break it down. Here’s a quick thread on two beginner friendly options strategies that anyone can learn and use to grow their account.
Thread 🧵 (1/6)
(2/6) - What’s a Cash Secured Put (CSP)?
It’s one of the most beginner-friendly options strategies out there. You’re essentially getting paid to potentially buy a stock you already want, at a discount.
Here’s how it works:
🔹You sell 1 put contract, which represents 100 shares.
🔹You choose a strike price (the price you’re willing to buy at) and an expiration date.
🔹You get paid upfront in the form of a premium.
Now two things can happen on expiration:
✅ If the stock stays above your strike price, you keep the premium and don’t have to buy the shares.
📉 If it closes at or below your strike, you still keep the premium, but you're now obligated to buy 100 shares at the strike price.
Either way, you’re getting paid. Just make sure you have the cash set aside in case you do get assigned.