[424B2] JPMORGAN CHASE & CO Prospectus Supplement
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering auto callable contingent interest notes linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index, maturing on December 20, 2028. The notes pay a quarterly contingent interest of at least 7.90% per annum (at least $19.75 per $1,000) only if on a Review Date the closing level of each index is at or above 70% of its Initial Value.
The notes may be automatically called starting December 15, 2026 if, on certain Review Dates, each index is at or above its Initial Value, returning $1,000 plus the applicable interest, with no further payments. If held to maturity and any index finishes below 60% of its Initial Value, investors lose 1% of principal for each 1% decline in the least performing index and can lose their entire investment.
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations, not bank deposits and not FDIC insured. An example estimated value is $972.60 per $1,000 principal amount, and the issuer states the final estimated value will not be less than $940.00 per $1,000, reflecting selling commissions, hedging costs and issuer funding assumptions.
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FAQ
What are JPMorgan AMJB Auto Callable Contingent Interest Notes?
The AMJB notes are auto callable contingent interest notes issued by JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. They link returns to the performance of three equity indices: the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index, and can pay conditional quarterly interest plus potential principal repayment at or before the December 20, 2028 maturity.
How is interest paid on the JPMorgan AMJB notes?
For each $1,000 principal amount, investors receive a Contingent Interest Payment of at least $19.75 (a rate of at least 7.90% per annum, paid quarterly) on a given Interest Payment Date only if, on the corresponding Review Date, the closing level of each of the three indices is at or above its Interest Barrier of 70% of Initial Value. If any index is below its barrier on that date, no interest is paid for that quarter.
Under what conditions are the JPMorgan AMJB notes automatically called?
The notes can be automatically called on any Review Date other than the first, second, third and final dates, starting December 15, 2026. If on one of those Review Dates the closing level of each index is at or above its Initial Value, the notes are called, and investors receive $1,000 plus the applicable contingent interest per note on the related Call Settlement Date. After an automatic call, no further payments are made.
What happens at maturity if the JPMorgan AMJB notes are not called early?
If the notes are not automatically called and, on the final Review Date, the Final Value of each index is at or above 60% of its Initial Value (its Trigger Value), investors receive $1,000 plus any final contingent interest per note. If any index finishes below 60% of its Initial Value, the maturity payment is calculated as $1,000 + ($1,000 × Least Performing Index Return), meaning investors lose more than 40% of principal and could lose their entire investment.
What are the main risks of investing in JPMorgan AMJB Auto Callable Notes?
Key risks include the possibility of losing a substantial portion or all of principal if the least performing index falls below its Trigger Value at maturity, and the risk of receiving no interest if any index is below its Interest Barrier on each Review Date. The notes are unsecured and unsubordinated obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., so payments depend on their creditworthiness. The notes are not listed, may have limited liquidity, and the issuer states the estimated value will be below the $1,000 issue price due to commissions, hedging costs and internal funding rates.
How is the estimated value of the JPMorgan AMJB notes determined?
The estimated value combines a fixed-income component and embedded derivatives, using internal models and an internal funding rate. An example estimated value is approximately $972.60 per $1,000 principal amount, and the issuer states the final estimated value will not be less than $940.00 per $1,000. This is lower than the original issue price because it includes selling commissions, projected hedging profits or losses and estimated hedging costs.
Which indices underlie the JPMorgan AMJB structured notes?
The notes reference three U.S. equity benchmarks: the Dow Jones Industrial Average, representing 30 large U.S. industrial companies; the Russell 2000 Index, tracking small-cap U.S. stocks; and the S&P 500 Index, covering 500 large U.S. companies. Payments depend on the individual performance of each index, with the least performing index determining principal outcomes at maturity.