AMJB JPMorgan callable notes tied to Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000, S&P 500
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering $4,000,000 of unsecured Callable Contingent Interest Notes due November 26, 2030, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $8.875 per $1,000 (a 10.65% per annum rate) for any Review Date on which the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 are each at or above 70% of their Initial Value. If any index is below this barrier on a Review Date, no interest is paid for that month.
The issuer may redeem the notes early, in whole, on specified Interest Payment Dates beginning May 27, 2026, at $1,000 plus any due contingent interest. If the notes are not redeemed and, on the final Review Date, any index is below its 70% Trigger Value, investors lose 1% of principal for each 1% decline of the least performing index, potentially losing their entire investment. The notes priced at $1,000 with an estimated value of $973.50 per $1,000 and are not FDIC insured or listed on an exchange.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insights
High-yield equity-linked note with full downside to worst index and issuer call risk.
These notes combine credit exposure to JPMorgan Chase Financial/JPMorgan Chase & Co. with equity market risk on the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500. The coupon of $8.875 per $1,000 each month (a 10.65% annual rate) is only paid when all three indices stay at or above 70.00% of their Initial Values on a Review Date.
Principal protection is conditional. If the notes are outstanding to the November 21, 2030 final Review Date and any index finishes below its Trigger Value (also 70.00% of Initial Value), repayment is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the worst-performing index, down to zero. Investors also face early redemption risk: starting with the May 27, 2026 Interest Payment Date, the issuer can redeem at par plus any due coupon, capping further income.
Economically, the structure embeds derivatives priced off internal models, reflected in the estimated value of $973.50 per $1,000 versus the $1,000 issue price. Liquidity is limited because the notes are not exchange-listed and secondary prices will factor in JPMorgan’s funding levels and hedging costs, so exiting before the 2030 maturity could realize a loss even if index levels are stable.
FAQ
What is JPMorgan symbol AMJB issuing in this 424B2 filing?
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is issuing $4,000,000 Callable Contingent Interest Notes due November 26, 2030, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
How do the contingent interest payments on the AMJB notes work?
For each $1,000 note, investors receive $8.875 per month (a 10.65% per annum rate) only if, on the related Review Date, the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 are each at or above 70.00% of their Initial Values; otherwise, no interest is paid for that month.
When can the JPMorgan AMJB notes be called early by the issuer?
The issuer may redeem the notes early, in whole but not in part, on any Interest Payment Date other than the first five and the final one. The earliest possible early redemption date is May 27, 2026, at $1,000 per note plus any applicable contingent interest.
What happens at maturity of the AMJB callable contingent interest notes?
If the notes are not redeemed early and, on the final Review Date, each index is at or above its 70.00% Trigger Value, investors receive $1,000 plus the final contingent interest. If any index is below its Trigger Value, the payoff becomes $1,000 + ($1,000 × Least Performing Index Return), which can result in losing more than 30.00% and up to all principal.
What is the estimated value versus the price to public for the AMJB notes?
The notes are sold at $1,000 per principal amount note. The estimated value, determined when terms were set, is $973.50 per $1,000, reflecting selling commissions, hedging costs and projected profits embedded in the issue price.
Are the JPMorgan AMJB notes principal protected or insured by the FDIC?
No. The notes are unsecured and unsubordinated obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial, guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., and are not bank deposits, not FDIC insured and may return less than the principal, depending on index performance.
Which indices determine payments on the AMJB callable contingent interest notes?
Payments depend on the individual performance of the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. The payoff is based on the Least Performing Index Return among these three.