
"The yield gap is striking. The 10-year Treasury currently yields 4.20%, meaning investors accept significantly less yield to own this ETF. Even the Fed Funds Rate at 3.75% dwarfs what JDIV pays."
"The distribution history shows real inconsistency. JDIV paid $0.35988 per share in June 2025, dropped to $0.16771 in September, and $0.11728 in March 2025. Those swings make income planning difficult for investors who rely on predictable cash flows."
"The portfolio leans into dividend growth rather than current income, a legitimate strategy that conflicts with what the name implies."
"JDIV charges 0.47% annually. Compare that to Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF, which charges just 0.06% and yields 3.39%. The fee and yield differences between the two funds are notable for investors comparing dividend ETF options."
JPMorgan Dividend Leaders ETF launched in September 2024 with a yield of 1.59%, which is low compared to the 10-year Treasury yield of 4.20%. The ETF's distribution history shows inconsistency, complicating income planning for investors. Its top holdings include growth-oriented technology companies rather than traditional high-yield dividend stocks. The fund charges an annual fee of 0.47%, higher than competitors like Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF, which charges 0.06% and offers a better yield. JDIV's total return over the past year is 12.79%.
Read at 24/7 Wall St.
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