TIGER Dividend Covered Call Active (472150) 🔎 In-depth
Mirae Asset · Equity · Korea · Covered call · Income · Price 2026.07.13 · Updated 2026-07-14
A covered-call income ETF managed by Mirae Asset (TIGER). It holds Korean dividend stocks to collect their dividends and, at the same time, sells (writes) KOSPI 200 call options to capture the option premium (a fee-like payment), aiming to pay both out to investors each month. It gives up part of the large upside in exchange for steady monthly distribution income, and it listed on December 12, 2023.
Price as of 2026.07.13 close
Understanding this ETF
The benchmark index is the 'KOSPI 200 Covered Call 5% OTM,' calculated by the Korea Exchange (KRX). A 'covered call' is a strategy of holding a stock and selling the call option attached to it (the right to buy at a set price) to someone else to collect a premium. '5% OTM (out of the money)' means the strike of that call is set about 5% above the current index level, so if the index climbs beyond that, the written call generates a loss and the upside gain is effectively capped at around +5%. This ETF does not replicate the index exactly; it is 'active,' with the manager adjusting the option weight and other factors to seek better results.
This ETF's gains and losses split into three parts. First, it moves as the held dividend stocks rise and fall. Second, when the index rises sharply, the written calls generate a loss and the gain is capped at around +5% (limited upside). Third, when the market stays in between or moves gently, income accrues in the amount of the premium received. In short, in a strongly rising market it rises less than a plain equity ETF (the cost of ceding the upside); in a sideways or mildly rising market it is relatively favorable thanks to the premium; and in a sharply falling market the premium cushions but does not stop the drop, so it falls along with the market. As a domestic asset, it is not affected by exchange rates.
This product's nature is to 'cede the upside in exchange for steady income (regular cash flow).' It aims to distribute dividends and option premium together each month, so it suits investors who want regular cash flow. Two things must be clear, however. First, when the market rises sharply it forgoes the gains above +5%, so it cannot keep up with the index in a bull run. Second, the premium only cushions declines 'a little,' so if the market plunges this ETF can fall substantially too. In other words, it is an income product weighted toward 'receiving steadily' rather than 'rising more or defending more.'
This ETF aims for monthly distributions of dividends and premium, with the distribution record date on the last business day of each month. On July 13, 2026, it fell sharply by -10.55% in a single day; this was not an ex-distribution effect (where the reference price drops as the distribution is stripped out) but rather it being swept up in a broad KOSPI plunge led that day by large-cap semiconductor stocks. It is an example showing that even a covered call cannot stop a decline through premium cushioning alone when the underlying KOSPI 200 itself plunges. Because monthly distributions are based on the last business day of each month, mid-July (the 13th) is not a scheduled distribution date.
In a nutshell, it 'holds dividend stocks to collect dividends, and on top of that sells call options to add the premium, paying it all out every month.' In a strongly rising market it gives up part of the upside but receives steady monthly income; and if the market plunges, just remember that the premium alone cannot fully offset it and it falls along with the market.
Holdings & weights
The makeup has two main parts. One is a basket of Korean dividend stocks that pay well (at least 60% invested in domestic equities), which produces the dividend income. The other is a position that sells (writes) KOSPI 200 call options, which produces the option premium income. Each month it writes fresh near-month (nearest-maturity) call options, resetting the 'about 5% above' cap based on the index close at that time. In other words, it combines two income streams, dividends (stocks) and premium (option writing), as the source for its distributions.
| Holding | Weight |
|---|---|
| SK Hynix000660 | 24.59% |
| Samsung Electronics005930 | 23.14% |
| TIGER 200102110 | 8.80% |
| SK Square402340 | 2.76% |
| Samsung Electro-Mechanics009150 | 1.84% |
| Hana Financial Group086790 | 1.77% |
| KB Financial Group105560 | 1.77% |
| Hyundai Motor005380 | 1.69% |
| LS Electric010120 | 1.41% |
| Hanwha Aerospace012450 | 1.34% |
| SK034730 | 1.11% |
Classification
Notes & cautions
- It aims for monthly distributions, but the distribution amount varies with performance and payment is not guaranteed.
- In a rising market, gains above about 5% are capped, and in a plunging market the premium only partially cushions the decline. Principal is not guaranteed.
- The July 13, 2026 plunge was not an ex-distribution effect but the result of a KOSPI drop led by large-cap semiconductor stocks.
ETF terms explained
Korea FSC securities market-price API (data.go.kr) · ETF classification & tagging: our own descriptive categorization
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