High-yield auto callable index notes from JPMorgan (NYSE: AMJB)
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering auto callable contingent interest notes linked individually to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq-100 Index and Russell 2000 Index, maturing on January 31, 2029. The notes can pay a monthly contingent interest rate of at least 7.20% per annum when, on a review date, each index closes at or above 58% of its initial level; if any index is below this barrier, no interest is paid for that month.
The notes may be automatically called as early as July 27, 2026 if, on certain review dates, each index is at or above its initial level, in which case investors receive principal plus the applicable interest and the notes terminate. If the notes are not called and, at final maturity, any index has fallen below 58% of its initial level, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the worst-performing index, leading to the loss of more than 42% and up to all of the invested principal.
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial, subject to the credit risk of both the issuer and JPMorgan Chase & Co., and do not provide any direct ownership of, or dividends from, the underlying index constituents.
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FAQ
What are the JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) auto callable contingent interest notes?
The notes are structured debt securities issued by JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. They pay potential contingent interest and return of principal based on the individual performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq-100 Index and Russell 2000 Index over a term ending on January 31, 2029.
How does the contingent interest on the AMJB-linked notes work?
For each review date when the notes are outstanding, investors receive a Contingent Interest Payment per $1,000 note equal to at least
When can these auto callable notes linked to AMJB be redeemed early?
The notes are subject to an automatic call on any review date other than the first five and the final one if the closing level of each index is at or above its initial value. The earliest possible call date is a review date on
What happens at maturity if the AMJB-linked notes are not automatically called?
If the notes are not called and, on the final review date, the closing level of each index is at or above
What are the main risks of investing in these JPMorgan Chase Financial structured notes?
Key risks include loss of principal if the worst-performing index finishes below its 58% trigger value, the possibility of no interest payments if any index is below its barrier on review dates, and exposure to the credit risk of both JPMorgan Chase Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations, are not FDIC insured, and will not be listed on an exchange, which can limit liquidity.
How are the AMJB-linked auto callable notes priced and what is their estimated value?
The price to the public is
Which indices determine payments on the JPMorgan AMJB auto callable notes?
The notes are linked individually to three equity indices: the Dow Jones Industrial Average (ticker INDU), the Nasdaq-100 Index (ticker NDX) and the Russell 2000 Index (ticker RTY). Payments depend on each index separately, based on its initial value set on the pricing date and subsequent closing levels on the specified review dates.