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"Current pace" annualizes CONY's last four payments; "trailing rate" sums the last twelve months of real payments. Both are before taxes and neither is a promise — CONY's payout is variable by design.
Computed live from CONY's most recent payments. Before taxes.
| Invested in CONY | Per Year | Per Month | Per Payment |
|---|---|---|---|
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Every payment CONY has ever made — with the next expected ex-dividend date — is charted on the CONY dividend history page.
The number most yield sites won't show you — computed live from CONY's own payment record.
Most calculators would happily compound CONY's yield for decades and hand you a nine-figure fantasy. We won't: CONY's payouts track option premiums on Coinbase stock, they have fallen about two-thirds from their year-ago pace, and the fund's own price does not behave like a growth asset. For the long-horizon truth, the history page's backtest replays real prices with real payouts. For decades-long compounding, use funds whose payouts actually grow — that's what the main calculator is for.
What CONY Is — Crypto's Cash Register
CONY sells option income on Coinbase — the stock that moves like the crypto market it serves, only harder. When crypto ran hot in 2024, CONY's monthly checks were enormous and its screenshots were everywhere. Since then the story has run in reverse: calmer crypto, smaller premiums, and weekly checks roughly a third of the old pace. Both eras are visible in the live numbers above.
Reading the Two Rates Above
The trailing rate still carries months of last year's boom, which is why it looks double the current pace — the annualized rate of the last four weekly checks. If you are sizing a position today, the current pace is the only number that describes today. The boom, the fade, and the next expected ex-date are all charted on the CONY dividend history page.
If You Hold It Anyway
CONY is for someone who wants paid-weekly exposure to crypto-market volatility through Coinbase — with eyes open about the mechanics: capped upside in rallies, full downside in crashes, return-of-capital components in the distributions, and ordinary-income tax treatment on most of what it pays. The ROC and NAV-erosion guide covers the fine print; the backtest on the history page shows what total return actually looked like through a full boom-bust cycle.
Model Growing Income Instead
Taxes, DRIP, income goals, and the year-by-year snowball chart — built for funds whose payouts rise over time.
Use the Free Dividend Calculator