JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) prices 11% contingent notes linked to State Street SPDR ETFs
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., is offering $3.614 million of Callable Contingent Interest Notes due December 15, 2028, linked to the least performing of three State Street SPDR ETFs covering energy, consumer discretionary and U.S. regional banks. The notes pay a contingent coupon of 11.00% per annum (2.75% quarterly, or $27.50 per $1,000) only if on a Review Date each ETF closes at or above 70% of its initial value; missed coupons can be paid later if the condition is met.
The issuer may redeem the notes early on specified interest payment dates starting June 17, 2026 at $1,000 plus due coupons, ending any further interest. At maturity, if the notes are not called and each ETF finishes at or above 60% of its initial value, investors receive full principal plus any due coupons; if any ETF is below 60%, repayment is reduced in line with the worst ETF’s loss, and investors can lose most or all of principal.
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated 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 $18.50 in selling and structuring fees, while the issuer’s estimated value is $961.50 per $1,000, reflecting embedded costs and hedging assumptions.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
FAQ
What is JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offering in this 424B2 document?
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is issuing Callable Contingent Interest Notes due December 15, 2028 with a total offering size of $3,614,000. The notes are linked to the least performing of three State Street SPDR ETFs: Energy Select Sector (XLE), Consumer Discretionary Select Sector (XLY) and SPDR S&P Regional Banking (KRE), and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
How do the contingent interest payments on the AMJB-linked notes work?
For each $1,000 note, investors may receive a quarterly Contingent Interest Payment of $27.50, equal to an 11.00% per annum rate. A payment is made for a Review Date only if the closing price of each ETF is at least 70.00% of its Initial Value (the Interest Barrier). Any unpaid prior coupons are added when a future Review Date meets this barrier, but if at every Review Date any ETF is below its Interest Barrier, no interest is ever paid.
What are the principal protection and downside risks of these JPMorgan Callable Contingent Interest Notes?
The notes do not guarantee principal repayment. If the notes are not redeemed early and on the final Review Date any ETF’s closing price is less than 60.00% of its Initial Value (its Trigger Value), the maturity payment per $1,000 note is $1,000 + ($1,000 × Least Performing Fund Return). This means investors lose 1% of principal for each 1% decline in the worst ETF from its Initial Value, and can lose more than 40.00% or even the entire principal.
When can JPMorgan redeem these notes early and what do investors receive?
The issuer 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 on June 17, 2026. On early redemption, each $1,000 note is paid (a) $1,000 plus (b) the Contingent Interest Payment, if any, for the immediately preceding Review Date plus (c) if that coupon is payable, any previously unpaid contingent coupons. After early redemption, no further payments are made.
How do the Initial Values, Interest Barriers and Trigger Values work for the three SPDR ETFs?
On the Pricing Date of December 12, 2025, the Initial Values were $45.51 for XLE, $120.70 for XLY and $67.08 for KRE. The Interest Barrier for each ETF is 70.00% of its Initial Value, and the Trigger Value is 60.00% of its Initial Value. Coupon payments require each ETF to be at or above its Interest Barrier on a Review Date, and principal protection holds only if on the final Review Date each ETF is at or above its Trigger Value.
What fees and estimated value are associated with these JPMorgan structured notes?
The price to the public is $1,000 per note, which includes total fees and commissions of $18.50 per $1,000 (selling commissions of $17.50 and a structuring fee of $1.00). The issuer’s estimated value of each note, when terms were set, is $961.50, reflecting an internal funding rate, hedging costs and projected hedging profits, which makes the estimated value lower than the issue price.
What key risks are highlighted for investors in the AMJB-linked Callable Contingent Interest Notes?
Key risks include the possibility of losing most or all principal if the worst ETF finishes below its Trigger Value, the risk of receiving no interest at all if any ETF is below its Interest Barrier on every Review Date, credit risk of both JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and JPMorgan Chase & Co., lack of liquidity since the notes will not be listed on an exchange, and sector-specific risks tied to energy, consumer discretionary and regional banking stocks.