[424B2] JPMORGAN CHASE & CO Prospectus Supplement
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering Uncapped Digital Barrier Notes due February 6, 2031 linked to the least performing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average®, Russell 2000® Index and S&P 500® Index. The notes provide uncapped, unleveraged exposure to any gain in the worst-performing index at maturity, with a contingent digital return of at least 53.25% if all three indices finish at or above their initial levels.
A 75% barrier applies to each index: if any index finishes below this barrier, repayment is reduced one‑for‑one with the decline of the least performing index and investors can lose most or all principal. The notes pay no interest, provide no dividends, are unsecured obligations subject to the credit risk of both issuer and guarantor, and are expected to be sold in $1,000 denominations. The indicative estimated value is about $944.60 per $1,000, and will not be less than $900.00, reflecting embedded selling, structuring and hedging costs and likely lower secondary market values.
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FAQ
What are the JPMorgan AMJB Uncapped Digital Barrier Notes linked to?
The notes are linked to the least performing of three U.S. equity indices: the Dow Jones Industrial Average®, the Russell 2000® Index and the S&P 500® Index. Payments depend on the individual performance of each index rather than on a combined basket.
How do investors in AMJB notes earn a positive return at maturity?
If the Final Value of each index is at or above its Initial Value, investors receive $1,000 plus the greater of (a) the Contingent Digital Return of at least 53.25% or (b) the actual return of the least performing index, providing uncapped upside based on the weakest index.
What happens to AMJB notes if any index falls but stays above the barrier?
If the Final Value of any index is below its Initial Value but the Final Value of each index is at or above 75% of its Initial Value, investors receive the full principal at maturity with no additional return, so mild to moderate declines are absorbed without loss if the barrier is respected.
When can investors in AMJB lose principal on these structured notes?
If the Final Value of any index falls below 75% of its Initial Value, the barrier benefit terminates and the maturity payment is $1,000 plus $1,000 times the least performing index return, so a 40% decline in that index would result in a 40% principal loss.
Do AMJB Uncapped Digital Barrier Notes pay interest or dividends?
No. The notes do not pay periodic interest, and investors do not receive dividends on the stocks in any index or any shareholder rights. All potential return comes from the maturity payment based on index performance.
What credit and liquidity risks apply to investors in AMJB notes?
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., so payments depend on both entities’ credit. The notes will not be listed on any exchange, and any secondary market price from JPMS is expected to be below the original issue price.
Why is the estimated value of the AMJB notes lower than the price to the public?
The indicative estimated value is approximately $944.60 per $1,000 and will not be less than $900.00, reflecting selling commissions, expected hedging profits or losses, and hedging costs included in the price to public. These factors and internal funding rates typically make secondary prices lower than the issue price.