JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM) offers $770K S&P‑linked Buffered Return Notes due 2031
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
424B2
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering $770,000 in uncapped buffered return enhanced notes linked to the S&P 500® Index due April 14, 2031, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes pay 1.025× any positive Index appreciation at maturity, provide a 15.00% downside buffer, and can lose up to 85.00% of principal if the Index falls beyond the buffer. The notes priced April 8, 2026 and are expected to settle on or about April 13, 2026; minimum denomination is $1,000.
Positive
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Key Figures
Offering size: $770,000
Price to public: $1,000 per note
Selling commission: $5 per note
+5 more
8 metrics
Offering size
$770,000
aggregate principal amount offered
Price to public
$1,000 per note
original issue price per $1,000 principal amount
Selling commission
$5 per note
fees and commissions included in price to public
Estimated value
$984.00 per $1,000
estimated value when terms were set
Upside Leverage Factor
1.025
multiplier for positive Index appreciation
Buffer Amount
15.00%
percent of decline absorbed before losses apply
Initial Value
6,782.81
S&P 500® closing level on Pricing Date (April 8, 2026)
Maturity Date
April 14, 2031
payment at maturity and final settlement date
Key Terms
Upside Leverage Factor, Buffer Amount, Estimated Value, Section 871(m)
4 terms
Upside Leverage Factor financial
"The notes are designed to return 1.025 times any appreciation"
Buffer Amount financial
"Buffer Amount: 15.00% — investors receive principal if decline is up to buffer"
Estimated Value financial
"The estimated value of the notes, when the terms were set, was $984.00"
Section 871(m) regulatory
"Section 871(m) generally imposes a 30% withholding tax on dividend equivalents"
A U.S. tax rule that treats certain payments from financial contracts (like options, swaps, and other instruments that mimic stock dividends) to non-U.S. investors as if they were direct dividends, requiring U.S. withholding tax. It matters to investors because it can reduce net returns on offshore trades that replicate U.S. equity income and may change pricing or counterparty behavior—think of it as a hidden sales tax that applies when a substitute payment acts like a dividend.
Offering Details
primary
Offering
Offering Type
primary
Use of Proceeds
To meet investor demand for products reflecting the risk‑return profile of the notes; proceeds equal estimated value plus selling commissions and hedging/structuring costs
FAQ
What are the JPM (JPMorgan) notes being offered?
They are uncapped buffered return enhanced notes linked to the S&P 500® Index. The offering totals $770,000 principal amount, pays 1.025× positive Index returns at maturity and is guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
How does the 15.00% buffer on JPM notes work?
The first 15.00% of an Index decline is absorbed. If the Final Value is within 15.00% below the Initial Value, you receive principal; losses apply only to declines beyond 15.00%.
What is the maximum loss on the JPMorgan structured notes (JPM)?
The notes can lose up to 85.00% of principal at maturity. Losses equal 1% of principal for each 1% the Index falls beyond the 15.00% buffer, subject to issuer and guarantor credit risk.
When do the JPM notes mature and what are key dates?
The notes mature on April 14, 2031. The Pricing Date was April 8, 2026, and settlement is expected on or about April 13, 2026; the Observation Date is April 8, 2031.
What was the estimated value versus issue price for JPM notes?
The estimated value was $984.00 per $1,000 note. The original issue price was $1,000 per note, reflecting selling commissions and hedging/structuring costs included in the price to public.