Quick Read
WisdomTree U.S. LargeCap Fund (EPS) yields 1.21%, paid $0.195-$0.245 quarterly in 2025, gained 16.88% over one year and 81.83% over five years, and is down 1.31% year-to-date in 2026. Rising corporate profits up 9.3% year-over-year strengthen WisdomTree’s earnings-weighted methodology and support its 18-year record of uninterrupted quarterly payments.
Retirees hunting for reliable income in 2026 keep landing on WisdomTree U.S. LargeCap Fund (NYSEARCA:EPS), a fund that does something different from most S&P 500 trackers. Rather than weighting companies by market capitalization, it weights them by earnings. Bigger earners get bigger allocations, tilting the portfolio toward profit-generating businesses rather than simply the most valuable ones.
How EPS Generates Its Income
The fund passes through dividends from its large-cap U.S. equity holdings. Owning over 500 companies across every major sector means no single dividend cut can meaningfully derail the income stream. The 1.21% dividend yield is modest, reflecting the fund’s composition: its largest holdings are high-earning tech and growth companies that tend to retain earnings rather than distribute them.
The quarterly distribution history shows a consistent, if unspectacular, income track record. 2025 dividends ranged from $0.195 in Q1 to $0.245 in Q4, and the fund has maintained a quarterly payment schedule since its inception in February 2007, covering multiple recessions and market dislocations without skipping a payment.
Is the Income Stream Actually Safe?
The earnings-weighted methodology provides structural income durability. Companies that earn more get more weight, naturally filtering toward businesses generating real cash. The 16% annual portfolio turnover keeps transaction costs low and tax drag minimal, both of which matter to retirees drawing income from a taxable account.
The macro backdrop is supportive. Total U.S. corporate profits reached $4,105.2 billion in Q3 2025, up 9.3% year-over-year, with financial sector profits growing sharply. Since EPS weights toward earnings, rising corporate profits directly strengthen the fund’s income foundation.
The honest caveat is the yield-versus-alternatives comparison. The 10-year Treasury currently yields 4.13%, well above EPS’s 1.21% dividend yield. That gap is real, and retirees who need current income above all else will feel it. What EPS offers in return is equity participation — the chance for both the income and the underlying portfolio to grow over time.
Total Return Puts the Yield in Context
The total return data over longer horizons reflects both price appreciation and dividend income combined. EPS gained 16.88% over the past year and 81.83% over five years, demonstrating that the dividend alone understates the fund’s actual return. Year-to-date in 2026 the fund is slightly negative, down 1.31%, reflecting broader equity market softness.
Eighteen years of uninterrupted quarterly payments, broad diversification across 500+ companies, and an improving profit environment all support income continuity. Where EPS falls short for pure income investors is yield level, not yield safety. Retirees needing 3% or 4% in annual income will find this fund insufficient on its own. The fund’s structure is designed to serve as a broad equity holding, though its yield level remains below what dedicated income instruments offer.