Calamos Launches Nasdaq-100 Autocallable ETF With Eye-Popping 18% Coupon

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
Calamos enters the high-yield ETF arms race with a new Nasdaq-linked fund offering nearly 18% payouts, banking on investor appetite for structured income products that promise tech exposure without the timing headaches.

Calamos is jumping headfirst into one of the hottest trends in income investing: ETFs that work like structured notes but trade like normal funds. The firm's latest entry, the Calamos Nasdaq Autocallable Income ETF (CAIQ), started trading on November 20 with a 17.98% weighted average coupon that practically screams for attention in today's income-starved market.

This isn't Calamos throwing spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks. The firm already has proof of concept with Calamos Autocallable Income ETF (CAIE), which launched back in June and has been quietly crushing it. That fund's monthly distributions average 14.96% annually, and preliminary data from Morningstar shows it leading the Derivative Income category among all 2024 launches. Turns out investors really like equity-linked income strategies, even when markets get choppy.

What makes CAIQ interesting is the Nasdaq-100 angle. You get exposure to the tech-heavy, growth-oriented index that everyone obsesses over, but wrapped in an autocallable structure designed to pump out income and potentially offer tax advantages. The whole point is avoiding the need to perfectly time when to buy or sell megacap tech stocks. The structured payoff mechanism handles that automatically, which is the kind of thing that sounds too good to be true until you read the fine print about how autocallables actually work.

Calamos executives aren't positioning this as jumping on a bandwagon. They're framing it as building out a full autocallable income platform, essentially trying to create a new category within the ETF world rather than just follow what everyone else is doing. CAIQ is meant to be the natural evolution for investors who want Nasdaq exposure but with an income twist and tax efficiency baked in.

The timing matters here. ETF issuers are in an all-out brawl to dominate the income space as traditional fixed income gets messier. Buffered ETFs, options-based funds, synthetic structures, and now autocallables are all competing for dollars as rate cut expectations shift and bond yields refuse to cooperate. With CAIQ's Nasdaq connection and that double-digit coupon staring you in the face, Calamos seems determined to plant its flag in this segment before the inevitable flood of copycats arrives and pushes autocallable structures into the mainstream.

Calamos Launches Nasdaq-100 Autocallable ETF With Eye-Popping 18% Coupon

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
Calamos enters the high-yield ETF arms race with a new Nasdaq-linked fund offering nearly 18% payouts, banking on investor appetite for structured income products that promise tech exposure without the timing headaches.

Calamos is jumping headfirst into one of the hottest trends in income investing: ETFs that work like structured notes but trade like normal funds. The firm's latest entry, the Calamos Nasdaq Autocallable Income ETF (CAIQ), started trading on November 20 with a 17.98% weighted average coupon that practically screams for attention in today's income-starved market.

This isn't Calamos throwing spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks. The firm already has proof of concept with Calamos Autocallable Income ETF (CAIE), which launched back in June and has been quietly crushing it. That fund's monthly distributions average 14.96% annually, and preliminary data from Morningstar shows it leading the Derivative Income category among all 2024 launches. Turns out investors really like equity-linked income strategies, even when markets get choppy.

What makes CAIQ interesting is the Nasdaq-100 angle. You get exposure to the tech-heavy, growth-oriented index that everyone obsesses over, but wrapped in an autocallable structure designed to pump out income and potentially offer tax advantages. The whole point is avoiding the need to perfectly time when to buy or sell megacap tech stocks. The structured payoff mechanism handles that automatically, which is the kind of thing that sounds too good to be true until you read the fine print about how autocallables actually work.

Calamos executives aren't positioning this as jumping on a bandwagon. They're framing it as building out a full autocallable income platform, essentially trying to create a new category within the ETF world rather than just follow what everyone else is doing. CAIQ is meant to be the natural evolution for investors who want Nasdaq exposure but with an income twist and tax efficiency baked in.

The timing matters here. ETF issuers are in an all-out brawl to dominate the income space as traditional fixed income gets messier. Buffered ETFs, options-based funds, synthetic structures, and now autocallables are all competing for dollars as rate cut expectations shift and bond yields refuse to cooperate. With CAIQ's Nasdaq connection and that double-digit coupon staring you in the face, Calamos seems determined to plant its flag in this segment before the inevitable flood of copycats arrives and pushes autocallable structures into the mainstream.