JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) prices S&P 500 & EURO STOXX 50 notes
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering $1,980,000 of Review Notes linked to the lesser performing of the S&P 500® Equal Weight Index and the EURO STOXX 50® Index, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
The notes may be automatically called as early as December 28, 2026 if the closing level of each index is at or above its Call Value, paying back $1,000 per note plus a Call Premium Amount of 9.50%, 19.00% or 28.50% depending on the Review Date. If not called and on the final Review Date each index is at or above 70% of its Initial Value, investors receive only their principal back.
If the notes are not automatically called and either index finishes below its 70% Barrier Amount, the maturity payment is $1,000 plus $1,000 times the Lesser Performing Index Return, so losses will exceed 30% of principal and can reach 100%. The notes pay no interest or dividends, are unsecured obligations subject to the credit risk of both JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co., and the estimated value at pricing was $956.90 per $1,000 note, below the $1,000 price to public.
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FAQ
What is JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offering in this 424B2 document?
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is issuing $1,980,000 of structured Review Notes linked to the lesser performing of the S&P 500® Equal Weight Index and the EURO STOXX 50® Index, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., with a $1,000 minimum denomination.
How and when can these JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) notes be automatically called?
The notes are reviewed on three dates: December 28, 2026, December 22, 2027 and December 22, 2028. If on any Review Date each index is at or above its Call Value (100%, 95% and 90% of Initial Value for the first, second and final Review Dates, respectively), the notes are automatically called and pay $1,000 plus a Call Premium Amount of 9.50%, 19.00% or 28.50% of $1,000 for that date.
What happens at maturity if the JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) notes are not called?
If the notes are not automatically called and on the final Review Date the Final Value of each index is at least 70.00% of its Initial Value, investors receive the $1,000 principal per note. If either index is below its 70.00% Barrier Amount, the payment becomes $1,000 + ($1,000 × Lesser Performing Index Return), meaning losses exceed 30% of principal and can reach all of the invested amount.
Do these JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) notes pay interest or provide dividends?
No. The notes do not pay periodic interest, and investors do not receive dividends on any securities in either index or any shareholder rights in those companies. Return potential is limited to the Call Premium Amounts if the notes are automatically called.
What are the main risks of the JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) Review Notes?
Key risks include potential loss of some or all principal if the Lesser Performing Index finishes below its Barrier Amount, no principal protection, no interest or dividends, exposure to the performance of each index individually, credit risk of JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co., possible early acceleration due to a change-in-law event, and limited or no liquidity because the notes are not listed on any exchange.
How does the estimated value of the JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) notes compare to the issue price?
The estimated value at pricing was $956.90 per $1,000 principal amount note, which is lower than the $1,000 price to public. The difference reflects selling commissions, a structuring fee, projected hedging profits or losses, and estimated hedging costs included in the original issue price.
Which indices underlie these JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) structured notes?
The notes are linked to the S&P 500® Equal Weight Index (Initial Value 7,850.10) and the EURO STOXX 50® Index (Initial Value 5,743.69). Payments depend on the performance of each index separately, with the payoff determined by the Lesser Performing Index.