JPMorgan AMJB Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000, KRE linked notes
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering $1,016,000 of Auto Callable Contingent Interest Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF, maturing on November 29, 2028 and fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $7.4583 per $1,000 (an 8.95% per annum rate) only if on a Review Date each underlying is at or above 70% of its initial level, with unpaid coupons potentially paid later if conditions are met. Beginning May 26, 2026, the notes are automatically called if on certain Review Dates each underlying is at or above its initial value, returning $1,000 plus applicable contingent interest.
If the notes are not called and any underlying finishes below 60% of its initial value, repayment at maturity is reduced in proportion to the decline of the least performing underlying, and investors can lose more than 40% or even all principal. The price to public is $1,000 per note, while the estimated value at pricing is $948 per $1,000, reflecting embedded selling, structuring and hedging costs, and the notes are subject to the credit risk of both JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co.
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FAQ
What is JPMorgan symbol AMJB’s new 424B2 structured note offering?
The company is issuing $1,016,000 of Auto Callable Contingent Interest Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF, maturing on November 29, 2028 and fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
How do the contingent interest payments work on the AMJB auto callable notes?
For each $1,000 note, investors may receive a monthly Contingent Interest Payment of $7.4583, equal to an annual rate of 8.95%, but only if on that Review Date the value of each underlying is at least 70% of its Initial Value; missed coupons can be paid later if the barrier is met on a future Review Date.
When can the AMJB notes be automatically called and what do investors receive?
Starting on May 26, 2026, if on any specified Review Date (other than the first five and the final Review Date) the value of each underlying is at or above its Initial Value, the notes are automatically called and investors receive $1,000 per note plus the applicable contingent interest and any previously unpaid contingent interest.
What are the main downside risks of the JPMorgan AMJB structured notes?
If the notes are not called and on the final Review Date the value of any underlying is below 60% of its Initial Value, the maturity payment per $1,000 note becomes $1,000 + ($1,000 × Least Performing Underlying Return), so investors lose more than 40% of principal and could lose it all.
How does the estimated value of the AMJB notes compare to the price to public?
The price to public is $1,000 per note, but the disclosed estimated value at pricing is $948.00 per $1,000 note, with the difference reflecting selling commissions, projected hedging profits or losses and hedging costs embedded in the issue price.
What fees and proceeds are associated with JPMorgan’s AMJB note issuance?
The notes carry selling commissions of $27.50 per $1,000 principal amount; on the $1,016,000 total issue, fees are $27,940 and proceeds to the issuer are $988,060, after deducting these fees.
What underlyings and barrier levels determine payments on the AMJB notes?
The notes reference the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF, with Interest Barriers at 70% of Initial Value and Trigger Values at 60% of Initial Value for each underlying, and all payoff calculations use the least performing underlying.