JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offers 13% callable notes due 2027
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is issuing $1,165,000 of callable contingent interest notes due November 19, 2027, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of 1.08333% (equivalent to 13.00% per annum) for each Review Date on which the S&P 500® Index, Dow Jones Industrial Average® and VanEck® Semiconductor ETF are all at or above 70.00% of their Initial Values. If any underlying is below its Interest Barrier on a Review Date, no interest is paid for that period.
The notes are callable at the issuer’s option on any Interest Payment Date from March 19, 2026 (except the first, second and final dates) at $1,000 plus any due interest. If not called, investors receive at maturity $1,000 plus the final coupon only if each underlying finishes at or above its Trigger Value, set equal to 70.00% of its Initial Value. If any Final Value is below its Trigger Value, the payoff is reduced in line with the worst-performing underlying, and investors can lose more than 30% and up to all of their principal.
The notes are unsecured and unsubordinated obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial, subject to the credit risk of both the issuer and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The price to public is $1,000 per note, including fees and commissions of $22.25 per $1,000, while the estimated value at pricing is $962.10 per note.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
FAQ
What security is JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offering in this 424B2?
The company is offering Callable Contingent Interest Notes fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., with a total principal amount of $1,165,000, linked to the S&P 500® Index, Dow Jones Industrial Average® and VanEck® Semiconductor ETF and maturing on November 19, 2027.
How do the 13% contingent interest payments on the AMJB-linked notes work?
For each $1,000 note, investors may receive a monthly Contingent Interest Payment of $10.8333, equal to a 13.00% per annum rate, but only if on the relevant Review Date the closing value of each underlying is at or above 70.00% of its Initial Value. If any underlying is below its Interest Barrier, no interest is paid for that period.
When can these callable contingent interest notes linked to AMJB underlyings be redeemed early?
JPMorgan Chase Financial may redeem the notes early, in whole but not in part, on any Interest Payment Date other than the first, second and final ones. The earliest early redemption date is March 19, 2026, at a price of $1,000 per note plus any Contingent Interest Payment due for the immediately preceding Review Date.
What happens at maturity if one of the S&P 500, Dow or VanEck Semiconductor ETF falls below its trigger?
If the notes are not redeemed early and the Final Value of any underlying is less than its Trigger Value (70.00% of its Initial Value), the maturity payment per $1,000 note is calculated as $1,000 + ($1,000 × Least Performing Underlying Return). In that case, investors lose more than 30.00% of principal and could lose their entire investment.
What are the main risks of the JPMorgan AMJB structured notes described here?
Key risks include: no principal protection; the possibility of no interest if any underlying stays below its Interest Barrier on Review Dates; dependence on the least performing underlying; credit risk of JPMorgan Chase Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co.; lack of listing and potential illiquidity; and an estimated value of $962.10 per $1,000 note that is lower than the price to public.
How are fees and estimated value structured for these JPMorgan callable notes?
The price to public is $1,000 per note, which includes $22.25 in selling commissions per $1,000 and other structuring and hedging costs. The estimated value at pricing is $962.10 per $1,000 note, reflecting the issuer’s internal funding rate and the value of embedded derivatives.
Which market indices and ETF underlie the AMJB callable contingent interest notes?
The notes are linked individually to three underlyings: the S&P 500® Index (Initial Value 6,800.26), the Dow Jones Industrial Average® (Initial Value 48,114.26) and the VanEck® Semiconductor ETF (Initial Value $351.94). Payments depend on the performance of each underlying, not on a combined basket.