JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offers auto-call notes tied to State Street ETFs
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering $5,000,000 of structured “Review Notes” linked to the least performing of three State Street sector ETFs: Consumer Staples (XLP), Energy (XLE) and Real Estate (XLRE). The notes mature on December 14, 2028 and can be automatically called as early as June 11, 2026 if each ETF closes at or above its Call Value (100% of its Strike Value), paying back $1,000 plus a Call Premium of up to 49.95% by the final Review Date.
The notes pay no interest or dividends and expose investors to loss of principal at maturity if they are not called and any ETF finishes below its Barrier Amount, set at 60% of its Strike Value ($47.28 for XLP, $27.576 for XLE and $24.48 for XLRE). In that case, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the least performing ETF and investors can lose all of their investment. The notes are unsecured obligations subject to the credit risk of both JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The price to the public is $1,000 per note, including $8.50 in fees, while the estimated value at pricing is $973.10 per $1,000.
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FAQ
What are the JPMorgan AMJB Review Notes described in this 424B2 filing?
The notes are structured investments issued by JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.. They are linked to the least performing of three State Street Select Sector SPDR ETFs in consumer staples, energy and real estate, and offer potential early redemption at a premium but no periodic interest or dividends.
How do the automatic call features of the JPMorgan AMJB notes work?
On each Review Date from June 11, 2026 through December 11, 2028, if the closing price of one share of each ETF is at or above its Call Value (100% of its Strike Value), the notes are automatically called. Investors then receive $1,000 plus a Call Premium that steps up over time, from 8.325% on the first Review Date to 49.950% on the final Review Date, and no further payments are made.
What are the barrier levels and potential losses on the JPMorgan AMJB notes?
Each ETF has a Barrier Amount of 60.00% of its Strike Value: $47.28 for the Consumer Staples ETF, $27.576 for the Energy ETF and $24.48 for the Real Estate ETF. If the notes are not called and the Final Value of any ETF is below its Barrier Amount, the maturity payment is $1,000 plus $1,000 × Least Performing Fund Return, so investors lose more than 40.00% of principal and could lose it all.
Do the JPMorgan AMJB Review Notes pay interest or dividends?
No. The notes do not pay interest and investors do not receive dividends from the ETFs or their underlying securities. All potential return comes from an automatic call premium or, if not called, repayment of principal subject to the barrier conditions at maturity.
What is the size, pricing and estimated value of the JPMorgan AMJB notes?
The total offering is $5,000,000 in principal amount, with a price to the public of $1,000 per note. Selling commissions are $8.50 per $1,000 principal amount, leaving $991.50 in proceeds to the issuer per note. The estimated value at pricing is $973.10 per $1,000 note, reflecting selling, structuring and hedging costs.
What key risks does the JPMorgan AMJB 424B2 highlight for these notes?
Key risks include the possibility of losing a significant portion or all principal if the least performing ETF finishes below its Barrier Amount, no interest or dividend payments, credit risk of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and JPMorgan Chase & Co., and limited liquidity since the notes will not be listed on an exchange. The filing also notes that secondary market prices are likely to be below the original issue price.
Which ETFs underlie the JPMorgan AMJB Review Notes and what sectors do they track?
The notes are linked to three State Street Select Sector SPDR ETFs: the Consumer Staples ETF (XLP), tracking the Consumer Staples Select Sector Index; the Energy ETF (XLE), tracking the Energy Select Sector Index; and the Real Estate ETF (XLRE), tracking the Real Estate Select Sector Index, each reflecting its respective GICS sector of the S&P 500 Index.