JPMorgan (JPM) review notes linked to Russell 2000, Nasdaq-100, XLU
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering Structured Investments Review Notes due June 26, 2031, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes are linked to the least performing of three Underlyings: the Russell 2000 Index, the Nasdaq-100 Index and the State Street Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF.
The notes have an automatic call feature beginning on June 25, 2027 and a stepped Call Premium Amount schedule (minimums start at 12.00% and increase up to 60.00% at the final Review Date). A Barrier Amount is set at 70.00% of each Underlying's Initial Value; if the Least Performing Underlying finishes below that barrier at maturity you may lose a substantial portion or all of principal. The notes pay no interest, are unsecured obligations of the issuer and are subject to issuer and guarantor credit risk. Pricing is expected on or about June 22, 2026 with settlement on or about June 25, 2026.
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Insights
Large downside exposure with capped upside through automatic call and step-up premiums.
The structure ties the maturity payoff to the least performing of three Underlyings, with a 70.00% barrier and no coupon. The investor benefits only from scheduled call premiums if all Underlyings meet call thresholds on a Review Date; otherwise downside equals the least performing Underlying Return.
Key dependencies are the relative performance of each Underlying on Review Dates and the timing of any automatic call. Secondary market liquidity and the absence of interest payments materially affect realized returns for holders who sell before a call or maturity.
Credit risk of issuer and guarantor is primary non-market risk for noteholders.
The notes are unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Payments depend on both entities' ability to pay; investors face potential loss if either defaults or enters resolution.
Market valuation will also reflect changes in credit spreads, and secondary market prices are expected to be lower than original issue price. Monitor future disclosures about creditworthiness in periodic filings.