JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC (AMJB) issues ETF-linked notes
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering $1,030,000 of Callable Contingent Interest Notes linked to the worst performer of three ETFs: the State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF, the iShares Russell 2000 ETF and the State Street SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF. The notes pay a contingent interest rate of 10.00% per annum (2.50% per quarter) if, on a Review Date, each ETF is at or above 70% of its Initial Value; missed coupons can be paid later if the condition is met.
The notes are unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., and may be redeemed early at the issuer’s option on specified interest payment dates, starting July 6, 2026. If held to the January 5, 2029 maturity and any ETF finishes below 60% of its Initial Value, investors lose 1% of principal for each 1% decline in the least performing ETF and could lose their entire investment. The issue price is $1,000 per note, including $18.50 of fees and commissions, while the estimated value at pricing was $963.30.
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FAQ
What are the key terms of the JPMorgan AMJB Callable Contingent Interest Notes?
The notes are linked to the least performing of three ETFs (XLE, IWM and KRE), have a maturity date of January 5, 2029, a principal amount of $1,000 per note and a total offering size of $1,030,000. They are unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
How is interest earned on the JPMorgan AMJB notes?
Holders receive a Contingent Interest Payment of $25.00 per $1,000 note (a 10.00% per annum rate, paid quarterly at 2.50%) for each Review Date on which the closing price of one share of each ETF is at or above its Interest Barrier, set at 70.00% of its Initial Value. Missed contingent coupons can be paid later if the barrier condition is satisfied on a subsequent Review Date.
Can investors in the JPMorgan AMJB notes lose principal?
Yes. If the notes are not redeemed early and the Final Value of any ETF is below its Trigger Value, set at 60.00% of its Initial Value, the payment at maturity is $1,000 + ($1,000 × Least Performing Fund Return). In that case, investors will lose more than 40.00% of principal and could lose their entire investment.
When can JPMorgan redeem the AMJB notes early and at what price?
JPMorgan Financial may, at its option, redeem the notes early, in whole but not in part, on any Interest Payment Date other than the first and final ones, starting July 6, 2026. The early redemption price per $1,000 note equals $1,000 plus the applicable Contingent Interest Payment and, if that payment is due, any previously unpaid contingent interest amounts.
What are the Initial Values, Interest Barriers and Trigger Values for the ETFs in the JPMorgan AMJB notes?
The Initial Values are the closing prices on the December 30, 2025 pricing date: $44.96 (Energy Select Sector SPDR), $248.03 (iShares Russell 2000) and $65.44 (SPDR S&P Regional Banking). The Interest Barriers are 70.00% of these levels, and the Trigger Values are 60.00% of these Initial Values.
What fees and estimated value are associated with the JPMorgan AMJB notes?
The price to the public is $1,000 per note, including $18.50 in fees and commissions per $1,000 principal amount. The estimated value at pricing was $963.30 per $1,000 note, reflecting selling, structuring and hedging costs.
What are the main risks of investing in the JPMorgan AMJB structured notes?
Key risks include the potential loss of a significant portion or all of principal if any ETF finishes below its Trigger Value, the possibility of receiving no interest payments if any ETF remains below its Interest Barrier on Review Dates, credit risk of JPMorgan Chase Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co., lack of liquidity since the notes are not listed, and sector and strategy risks tied to energy stocks, small-cap equities and regional banks.