High-yield JPMorgan (NYSE: AMJB) notes tied to S&P 500, Nasdaq-100 and semiconductor ETF
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering callable contingent interest notes linked separately to the S&P 500® Index, the Nasdaq‑100 Index® and the VanEck® Semiconductor ETF, maturing on December 30, 2027. The notes pay a monthly contingent interest rate of at least 11.05% per annum only if, on a given review date, each underlying is at or above 70% of its initial value; otherwise no interest is paid for that period.
Principal is protected only if, at maturity and absent early redemption, each underlying is at or above 60% of its initial value. If any underlying finishes below this trigger, repayment is reduced one‑for‑one with the decline of the worst performer, and investors can lose most or all of their principal. The issuer may redeem the notes early on specified interest payment dates starting July 30, 2026, paying $1,000 per note plus any due interest. The preliminary estimated value is about $956.70 per $1,000 note and will not be less than $900 at pricing, reflecting embedded selling costs and hedging.
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FAQ
What is JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offering in this 424B2?
The company is offering callable contingent interest notes linked individually to the S&P 500® Index, the Nasdaq‑100 Index® and the VanEck® Semiconductor ETF, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. and scheduled to mature on December 30, 2027.
How do the contingent interest payments on the AMJB-linked notes work?
On each review date, if every underlying index/ETF is at least 70% of its initial value, investors receive a contingent interest payment equal to at least $9.2083 per $1,000 note (at least 11.05% per annum, paid monthly). If any underlying is below its barrier, no interest is paid for that period.
What happens at maturity for these JPMorgan callable contingent interest notes?
If the notes are not redeemed early and each underlying’s final value is at or above its 60% trigger value, investors receive $1,000 per note plus any final contingent interest. If any underlying ends below its trigger, the payout is reduced by the full decline of the least performing underlying, and investors can lose more than 40% and up to all of principal.
When can JPMorgan redeem the AMJB-linked notes early?
JPMorgan may, at its option, redeem the notes early in whole on any interest payment date other than the first five and the final one, starting on July 30, 2026. Early redemption pays $1,000 per note plus any due contingent interest, after which no further payments are made.
What is the estimated value of these JPMorgan structured notes?
If priced on the indicated date, the estimated value would be approximately $956.70 per $1,000 note, and at pricing it will not be less than $900. This value is based on JPMorgan’s internal models and funding rate and is lower than the price to public because it includes selling commissions, structuring costs and hedging costs.
What are the main risks of investing in the AMJB callable contingent interest notes?
Key risks include potential loss of principal if any underlying finishes below its 60% trigger, the possibility of receiving no interest if any underlying stays below its 70% interest barrier on review dates, credit risk of JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co., no listing or guaranteed liquidity, and sensitivity to the volatility and concentration risks of the semiconductor sector via the VanEck® Semiconductor ETF.
Do investors in these notes receive dividends from the S&P 500, Nasdaq-100 or VanEck Semiconductor ETF?
No. Investors do not receive dividends on the ETF or on securities in the indices and have no ownership or voting rights in the underlying assets. Returns come only from the contingent interest and any principal repayment determined by the underlyings’ performance.