Auto-callable contingent notes from JPMorgan (AMJB) with ≥7.65% coupon
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC offers auto-callable contingent interest notes due April 3, 2031, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes pay contingent quarterly interest if each underlying index is at least 70.00% of its Initial Value and may be automatically called as early as March 31, 2027. The contingent interest rate will be at least 7.65% per annum (at least 1.9125% per quarter). Pricing is expected on or about March 31, 2026 with settlement on or about April 6, 2026. Minimum denominations are $1,000. The estimated value at pricing is approximately $934.90 per $1,000 note and will not be less than $900.00 per $1,000 note. Payments at maturity are linked to the least performing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average®, the Russell 2000® and the S&P 500®; if the least performing Index finishes below its 70.00% Trigger Value, holders can lose a substantial portion or all principal.
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Insights
Auto-callable structure trades yield potential for coupon-like payouts but caps upside and concentrates downside on the weakest index.
The notes provide contingent quarterly payments at a minimum 7.65% annualized rate if all three indices meet the 70.00% Interest Barrier on a Review Date. The structure converts index exposure into periodic conditional coupons with an automatic call feature starting on March 31, 2027.
Key dependencies include the joint performance of three indices and the timing/occurrence of automatic calls. The economic outcome at maturity is determined by the Least Performing Index, exposing holders to full downside of that index while foregoing index appreciation.
Credit risk of JPMorgan Financial and the guarantor is central; secondary market liquidity is limited.
Payments are unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.; investors are exposed to both entities' creditworthiness. The pricing supplement notes the estimated value uses an internal funding rate, which may differ from market rates.
Secondary market liquidity is likely limited and repurchase prices by JPMS may be below original issue price. Holders should assume limited tradability and dependence on issuer/affiliate bid willingness.