JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) prices review notes tied to SPW, RTY and XLE
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering unsecured “Review Notes” linked to the least performing of the S&P 500® Equal Weight Index, the Russell 2000® Index and the State Street® Energy Select Sector SPDR® ETF, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes may be automatically called as early as December 16, 2026 if each underlying is at or above its Call Value, paying back $1,000 per note plus a Call Premium Amount starting at at least 12.55% of principal and rising to at least 50.20% on the final Review Date. If not called, investors receive principal at maturity only if each underlying finishes at or above 70.00% of its Strike Value; otherwise, the payoff is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the least performing underlying, and investors can lose more than 30% and up to all of their capital. The notes pay no interest or dividends, have minimum denominations of $1,000, and expose holders to the credit risk of both JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The indicative estimated value is approximately $971.50 per $1,000 note and will not be less than $940.00 when finalized.
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FAQ
What does JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offer in these 2029 review notes?
The notes are structured investments linked to the least performing of the S&P 500® Equal Weight Index, the Russell 2000® Index and the State Street® Energy Select Sector SPDR® ETF, maturing on December 17, 2029 and fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
How does the automatic call feature work on the AMJB-linked review notes?
On each Review Date starting December 16, 2026, if the closing value of each underlying is at or above its Call Value (100% of its Strike Value), the notes are automatically called and pay $1,000 plus a Call Premium Amount for each note, after which no further payments are made.
What is the downside risk to principal on these JPMorgan review notes?
If the notes are not called and the Final Value of any underlying is below its Barrier Amount of 70.00% of its Strike Value, the maturity payment becomes $1,000 plus $1,000 times the return of the least performing underlying, so investors can lose more than 30.00% and up to their entire principal.
Do the AMJB review notes pay interest or provide dividend exposure?
No. The notes do not pay periodic interest, and investors do not receive dividends on the ETF or on any securities in the indices; all potential return comes from Call Premium Amounts or the final payoff formula.
What Call Premium Amounts are offered on the JPMorgan review notes?
The minimum Call Premium Amounts per $1,000 note range from $125.500 (at least 12.55%) on the first Review Date to $502.000 (at least 50.20%) on the final Review Date, with intermediate steps such as $251.000 on the fifth and $407.875 on the tenth Review Date.
What is the estimated value of these structured notes versus the price to public?
If priced today, the estimated value would be about $971.50 per $1,000 note, and when terms are set it will not be less than $940.00 per $1,000, which is lower than the price to public because selling, structuring and hedging costs are included in the offering price.
What key risks do investors face with the AMJB 2029 review notes?
Investors assume principal risk tied to the least performing underlying, credit risk of JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co., no liquidity from exchange listing, potential secondary market discounts, and structural risks such as limited appreciation (capped at Call Premium Amounts) and reliance on barrier protection only at the final Review Date.