JPMorgan (AMJB) launches autocall contingent‑interest notes tied to MQUSTVA
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering Auto Callable Contingent Interest Notes linked to the MerQube US Tech+ Vol Advantage Index, due April 4, 2031, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes pay a monthly contingent interest when the Index closes at or above 70.00% of its initial value and will be automatically called if the Index closes at or above the Initial Value on a quarterly Autocall Review Date. The notes reflect a 6.0% per annum daily deduction to the Index level and a notional financing cost tied to the QQQ Fund. Pricing is expected on or about April 1, 2026, with settlement on or about April 7, 2026. Investors may lose substantial principal if the Final Value is below the Trigger Value of 65.00% of the Initial Value.
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Insights
Complex, yield-enhanced autocall tied to a leveraged volatility-targeting index with heavy daily deductions.
The notes provide contingent monthly coupons at a stated minimum annual rate of 17.70% if the Index meets the Interest Barrier on each Interest Review Date, and include an automatic call feature beginning on April 1, 2027. Key drivers are the Index’s weekly volatility targeting, the 6.0% per annum daily deduction and a notional financing cost applied to the QQQ Fund exposure.
Risks include amplified downside from leverage and daily deductions, limited upside (coupons only, no participation in Index appreciation), and low liquidity. Subsequent pricing will set the final contingent rate, estimated value floor and secondary-market terms; those finalized metrics will materially affect expected return.
Payments depend on issuer and guarantor credit; estimated value below issue price.
These notes are unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial and fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Any payment is subject to both entities’ credit risk. The pricing supplement states the estimated value would be approximately $930.40 per $1,000 note if priced today and will not be less than $900.00 per $1,000.
Secondary market prices will likely be lower than issue price; repurchase dynamics and an internal funding rate may produce differences between published account values and model estimates.