JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) unveils auto callable notes with 10.10% contingent interest and principal risk
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering auto callable contingent interest notes linked individually to the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund, maturing on December 14, 2028.
The notes can pay a monthly contingent coupon of at least 10.10% per annum (about 0.84167% per month) for each review date when every underlying closes at or above 70% of its initial value. Starting with the June 10, 2026 review, the notes are automatically called if each underlying is at or above its initial value, returning $1,000 per note plus that period’s coupon, with no further payments.
If the notes are not called and any underlying finishes below 65% of its initial value at final maturity, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the decline in the worst performer, and investors can lose more than 35% and up to all of their principal. The minimum denomination is $1,000, selling commissions are capped at $7 per $1,000, and the estimated value is about $970.60 per $1,000 note, not less than $900.
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FAQ
What is JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offering in this 424B2 document?
The company is offering auto callable contingent interest notes due December 14, 2028, linked separately to the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co..
How do the contingent interest payments on the AMJB notes work?
For each $1,000 note, investors receive a contingent monthly coupon of at least $8.4167 (a rate of at least 10.10% per annum) only if, on the relevant review date, the closing value of each underlying is at or above 70% of its initial value. If any underlying is below that barrier, no coupon is paid for that period.
When can the AMJB notes be automatically called and what do investors receive?
Beginning with the June 10, 2026 review date, if each underlying closes at or above its initial value on any review date other than the first five and the final one, the notes are automatically called. Investors then receive $1,000 per note plus the applicable contingent interest payment on the corresponding call settlement date, and no further payments are made.
What principal protection do the AMJB notes offer at maturity?
The notes do not guarantee principal. If they are not called and the final value of each underlying is at or above 65% of its initial value, investors receive $1,000 per note plus any final coupon. If any underlying finishes below 65%, the maturity payment is $1,000 plus $1,000 times the return of the least performing underlying, so investors can lose more than 35% and up to 100% of principal.
What are the key risks highlighted for the AMJB auto callable contingent interest notes?
Key risks include the possibility of substantial or total loss of principal, the risk that no interest may be paid if any underlying falls below its interest barrier on all review dates, and credit risk to both JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations, will not be listed on an exchange, and may have limited or no liquidity.
How does the estimated value of the AMJB notes compare to the price to the public?
If priced on the date shown, the estimated value would be approximately $970.60 per $1,000 note and will not be less than $900 per $1,000 at pricing. The difference from the $1,000 issue price reflects selling commissions, projected hedging profits or losses and hedging costs embedded in the original price.
What underlyings drive the performance of the AMJB structured notes?
The notes reference three separate underlyings: the Nasdaq-100 Index (NDX), tracking large non-financial Nasdaq stocks; the Russell 2000 Index (RTY), tracking small-cap U.S. equities; and the Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLU), an ETF focused on S&P 500 utilities sector companies.