Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Income Advantage ETF (RSPA) offers an 8.9% dividend yield using equity-linked notes from major banks to generate monthly income, but caps upside participation in bull markets—SPY returned 13% over one year while RSPA returned 11%, and RSPA’s ordinary income from ELNs is taxed at marginal rates (22%-37%) rather than the favorable 15-20% capital gains rate applied to qualified dividends. SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) tracks the cap-weighted index and allows full market participation without upside caps.

RSPA’s high yield masks two structural costs: capped gains in strong rallies and unfavorable tax treatment that erodes after-tax returns for investors in taxable accounts, making the fund suitable primarily for tax-advantaged retirement accounts where ordinary income classification has no cost.

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Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Income Advantage ETF (NYSEARCA:RSPA) pays investors a monthly distribution that would be the envy of most income strategies. The fund's dividend yield sits near 8.9%, generated by layering an options income overlay on top of the S&P 500 Equal Weight Index. For investors hunting yield in a market where the 10-year Treasury offers 4.33%, that headline number is genuinely compelling.

Two structural risks can quietly erode the value of this holding for the wrong investor. The first: the way RSPA generates income permanently limits what investors can earn when markets run. The second: a large portion of what RSPA pays out is taxed at the least favorable rate available to most investors.

Most covered-call ETFs sell call options directly against their equity holdings. RSPA takes a different route. The fund uses equity-linked notes (ELNs) issued by major financial institutions to replicate the economics of an options overlay. ELNs from Citigroup Global Markets, Morgan Stanley Financial, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, Royal Bank of Canada, Barclays, and Mizuho Markets collectively represent a meaningful slice of the fund's holdings alongside its equity positions.

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An ELN (equity-linked note) is a debt instrument whose return is tied to the performance of an underlying equity or index. In RSPA's case, these notes deliver option premium income in exchange for capping the fund's participation in market upside beyond a certain level. The income is real. The constraint is equally real.

When the S&P 500 Equal Weight Index rises sharply, RSPA does not fully participate. The ELN structures have sold away a portion of the upside in exchange for the premium that funds the monthly distribution. In a flat or modestly rising market, this trade works well. In a strong bull run, investors watch the index move while their fund lags.

The performance data makes this concrete. RSPA is essentially flat year-to-date in 2026, up less than 1%, while the cap-weighted S&P 500 (as tracked by the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY)) is down 5.4% year-to-date. Over a one-year window, SPY has returned about 13% while RSPA has returned about 11% on price alone. Add distributions back and the total return picture improves, but the capped upside is a permanent feature. In sustained bull markets, this gap widens.

The ELN structure also introduces counterparty risk that a standard covered-call ETF does not carry. If one of the issuing banks were to default, the fund could suffer losses unrelated to equity market performance. Given the counterparties involved, this is a low-probability scenario, but it is a distinct risk that does not exist in funds holding options directly.

The chart illustrates total shareholder yield, comprising dividend and net buyback yield, across S&P 500 sectors and the S&P 500 Index as of March 31, 2022.

When a standard equity fund pays dividends, a portion typically qualifies for the lower long-term capital gains tax rate (15% or 20% for most investors). ELN income does not work that way. Because ELNs are debt instruments, the premium income they generate is classified as ordinary income, taxed at the investor's marginal rate: 22%, 24%, or higher for many investors.

An investor in the 24% bracket receiving RSPA distributions in a taxable account sees their after-tax yield shrink materially compared to the headline figure. A fund paying qualified dividends at the same pre-tax yield would leave that investor better off. Any honest yield comparison between RSPA and alternatives must be done on an after-tax basis.

This tax treatment is a feature of the ELN approach across the category, and especially worth flagging here because RSPA's high yield is its primary selling point.

Monthly distribution amounts from Invesco: Track whether the per-share payout is stable, rising, or declining. A distribution cut signals that ELN premium income has compressed, likely due to falling market volatility. The VIX is the leading indicator: it currently sits near 25, in the elevated uncertainty range. If volatility compresses back toward the low teens (as it did in late December 2025 when the VIX touched 13.47), option premiums shrink and so does the income.

Your account type and marginal tax rate: If you hold RSPA in a taxable brokerage account and your marginal rate is 22% or above, compare your after-tax yield against alternatives. RSPA belongs in tax-advantaged accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s) where the ordinary income classification is irrelevant.

The 10-year Treasury yield: The 10-year currently sits near 4.3%, up about 0.3% over the past month. Rising risk-free rates increase the opportunity cost of a capped-upside strategy. If the 10-year pushes toward 5%, the relative appeal of RSPA's yield narrows against instruments carrying no upside cap. Monitor the Federal Reserve's FRED data at fred.stlouisfed.org and reassess when the 10-year moves more than 50 basis points in either direction.

RSPA is a well-constructed fund for what it does. The equal-weight foundation provides genuine diversification across all 500 S&P constituents, with industrials at 16.1% and information technology at 13.4% rather than the mega-cap concentration that defines the cap-weighted index. The ELN overlay delivers a real income stream.

Investors who hold RSPA in tax-advantaged accounts and understand they are trading upside participation for monthly income are getting exactly what the fund advertises. Investors holding it in taxable accounts without accounting for ordinary income tax treatment, or expecting it to keep pace with a strong equity rally, are working with an incomplete picture of what they own.

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