JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) issues callable notes tied to NDXT, RTY and SPX
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering callable contingent interest notes linked separately to the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index, maturing on November 24, 2027. Investors may receive monthly contingent interest at an annual rate between 10.25% and 12.25% if, on each review date, the closing level of every index is at least 70% of its initial value.
The issuer can redeem the notes early on specified interest payment dates, starting March 24, 2026, paying principal plus any due contingent interest. If held to maturity and each index finishes at or above its 70% trigger value, investors receive principal plus the final contingent interest payment; otherwise, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the worst-performing index, and the entire principal can be lost. The notes are unsecured obligations with an estimated value of about $967.60 per $1,000, not less than $900.00 at pricing, and do not pay dividends from the underlying indices.
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FAQ
What are the JPMorgan (AMJB) callable contingent interest notes described here?
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated debt of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., that pay contingent monthly interest and return of principal based on the performance of the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index.
How do the contingent interest payments on the AMJB-linked notes work?
For each $1,000 note, you receive a contingent interest payment of between
What happens at maturity of these JPMorgan (AMJB) notes?
If the notes are not redeemed early and on the final review date the final value of every index is at least its 70% trigger value, you receive $1,000 principal plus the final contingent interest per note. If any index is below its trigger value, the maturity payment is $1,000 plus $1,000 multiplied by the return of the worst-performing index, so losses greater than
When can the AMJB notes be called early by JPMorgan?
JPMorgan may, at its option, redeem the notes early in whole on any interest payment date other than the first, second and final dates. The earliest possible early redemption date is
What is the estimated value of these JPMorgan (AMJB) structured notes at issuance?
If priced on the described date, the estimated value would be approximately
What key risks are highlighted for investors in the AMJB callable contingent interest notes?
Key disclosed risks include: loss of principal if the worst-performing index ends below 70% of its initial value; the possibility of no interest payments if any index stays below its barrier on review dates; credit risk of JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co.; lack of dividends from the indices; liquidity risk since the notes will not be listed; and potential secondary market prices below the original issue price.
Which indices determine payments on these JPMorgan (AMJB) structured notes?
Payments depend separately on three indices: the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index (NDXT), the Russell 2000 Index (RTY) and the S&P 500 Index (SPX). Results are based on the least performing index, not an averaged basket, so poor performance of any one index can reduce interest payments and principal repayment.