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Retirees who admire Warren Buffett face a recurring frustration: Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK-B | BRK-B Price Prediction) pays no dividend, so owning the stock means watching the compounding happen on paper while no cash hits the brokerage account.

The OMAH ETF offers high monthly income by selling calls on Berkshire Hathaway and its top holdings, targeting a 15% annual yield. The fund sacrifices upside potential for consistent income, making it suitable for income-focused investors rather than those seeking capital appreciation. Key risks include OMAH's short track record, potential NAV erosion, concentration risk, and higher fees compared to owning Berkshire directly.

OMAH paid out $0.23225 per share yesterday, the latest in a string of monthly distributions designed to hit a 15% annualized yield.

The Solactive VistaShares Berkshire Select Index tracks the 20 largest Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) holdings plus BRK.B itself. The fund takes a very active approach using weekly and monthly options to generate income. We look at how round one of the face-off went between OMAH and Berkshire Hathaway.

Warren Buffett built his fortune by buying businesses with durable competitive advantages at reasonable prices and holding them for decades.

VistaShares Target 15 Berkshire Select Income ETF (NYSEARCA:OMAH) promises something Berkshire Hathaway itself has never offered: a monthly paycheck. By mirroring Berkshire's top equity holdings and selling covered call options against those positions, the fund targets roughly 15% in annual income. Since its March 4, 2025 launch, it has grown to nearly $690 million in... OMAH Promises Monthly Income From Berkshire Holdings, With One Major Catch.
