The S&P 500 is kicking off the second quarter on a solid note, tallying gains of more than 8% in the first three weeks of April as early earnings results suggest a sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit earnings growth may be underway, according to FactSet data. What’s also happening, however, is a resurgence in investor interest in a classic safe haven asset: gold. The equity market may seem resilient in the face of turmoil, but the appetite for gold — and income-generating gold ETFs — seems to suggest there’s brewing concern or at least a little unease over what’s ahead.
Thus far in April, our data shows that the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) has picked up $2 billion in net new assets month-to-date. The SPDR Gold Minishares Trust (GLDM) has taken in about $1 billion. In aggregate, gold ETFs have seen nearly $4 billion in net inflows in the second quarter-to-date.
See related: Gold ETFs Gain As Advisors Seek New Diversifiers
All Eyes on Fed
The World Gold Council, in a recent commentary, framed market conditions around the concept of fragility. It said: “The [equity]rally rests on fragile foundations, with little sign of a Middle East resolution and its effects yet to fully transmit through the system. Gold has held up, likely given how precariously the macro picture is balanced.”
That’s a view that’s being echoed across the asset management industry, as markets look to price in ongoing geopolitical heat, and a murky interest rate policy given recent trends in inflation.
To that point, State Street Investment Management recently said that gold ETF demand in the U.S. remains path-dependent on the Federal Reserve. If rate policy remains in a “higher for longer” state, gold investors may remain reluctant to jump back into the yellow metal. A softening in that policy, however, could open the flood gates to new demand.
The Federal Reserve’s next meeting is coming up next week on April 29. What regulators say could be a major catalyst for what happens next to gold.
Generating Yield Where None Exists
It’s interesting to note that, amid the assets now flowing into gold ETFs, some are landing in options-based gold ETFs that bring safety and income together for gold investors.
Consider, for example, the NEOS Gold High Income ETF (IAUI). The fund, which uses an options-overlay strategy to provide monthly income while maintaining gold exposure, has emerged as a popular choice for investors in 2026.
Back in March, when IAUI earned an ETF.com award, Garrett Paolella, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of NEOS, said that product innovation around the use of options has enabled investors to turn to gold for both risk management and diversification as well as income generation.
“The main legacy criticism of gold is that it has been a non-income producing asset,” Paolella said. “In building IAUI, we set out to change that. For investors who wanted exposure to gold’s historically strong diversification properties and capital appreciation potential but had an income need, IAUI added a way to seek high monthly income alongside the timeless value proposition of the precious metal.”
IAUI’s unique design blends physical gold exposure through the use of gold ETFs with an options strategy designed to generate monthly income. The strategy means investors get capped upside capture of gold’s price performance (IAUI is up about 2.5% YTD vs 8.4% for GLD) and a hefty distribution rate, currently pegged at 12.5%.
Other High-Income Gold Contenders
IAUI isn’t alone in the effort to capture gold’s upside and diversification potential while generating income. This is a category that has seen interesting product development in recent years and today counts several ETFs from different providers. Among the funds, consider a few examples:
- The Simplify Gold Strategy PLUS Income ETF (YGLD) is a unique take on this opportunity set. Instead of providing 1:1 gold exposure, YGLD uses futures to create 150% leverage to gold, then overlays an income-generating spread strategy. This approach looks to capture more of gold’s upside while still generating a 12% distribution.
- The Kurv Gold Enhanced Income ETF (KGLD) uses a synthetic covered call strategy to generate a target yield of 10–12%.
- The USCF Gold Strategy Plus Income Fund (USG) sits as the lowest-cost ETFs in this category, with an expense ratio of 45 bps. The fund holds gold futures and sells out-of-the-money call options, designed for income-plus-growth rather than maximizing yield alone. And
- The FT Vest Gold Strategy Target Income ETF (IGLD) uses FLEX options to target a specific level of income and a cap on gains over a set period.
Unique Appeal
In this market environment where geopolitical tension and higher oil prices may lead to sticky inflation and an unclear path for rates, income-generating gold ETFs are finding new traction as a solution to investors seeking safety, diversification and immediate income generation.
| Ticker | Issuer | Primary Strategy | Expense Ratio | Typical Yield |
| IAUI | NEOS | Physical Gold + Sold Calls | 0.78% | 9–12% |
| KGLD | Kurv | Synthetic Gold + Sold Calls | 1.00% | 10–12% |
| YGLD | Simplify | 1.5x Gold + Option Spreads | 0.53% | 11–13% |
| USG | USCF | Gold Futures + OTM Calls | 0.45% | 5–7% |
| IGLD | First Trust | Target Income Flex Options | 0.85% | 7–9% |
For more options-based gold ETFs, check out our ETF Screener.
For more news, information, and strategy, visit ETF Trends.
Leave a comment