JPMorgan (JPM) prices $1.264M callable Review Notes due 2031
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC priced $1,264,000 of Review Notes due April 24, 2031, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes are callable beginning April 23, 2027 on scheduled Review Dates and pay, if called, principal plus a Call Premium Amount that increases by Review Date. If not called, maturity payments depend on the Final Value of each underlying (the Russell 2000, Nasdaq-100 and the Utilities Select Sector SPDR® ETF) and are determined by the Least Performing Underlying Return relative to its Initial Value; a Final Value below the Barrier Amount (70.00% of Initial Value) exposes holders to a loss of principal, potentially to zero. Notes priced April 21, 2026, settle on or about April 24, 2026, in minimum denominations of $1,000, with selling commissions of $40.75 per $1,000 and an estimated value of $944.10 per $1,000 when priced.
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Insights
Callable, barrier-linked principal at risk; standard sponsor guarantee and disclosure scope.
The offering is a structured debt product with an automatic call feature and a final payoff linked to the least performing of three underlyings; credit exposure rests on JPMorgan Financial and the guarantor, JPMorgan Chase & Co. The pricing supplement preserves issuer-side amendment rights for manifest errors.
Key legal items to watch in follow-up filings include any amendment to the pricing supplement, final settlement confirmation, and the treatment of the guarantee in resolution scenarios referenced in the prospectus supplement.
Economics show limited upside via graded call premiums and asymmetric downside tied to the least performing underlying.
The notes cap appreciation to the scheduled Call Premium Amounts (up to 59.25% on final Review Date) and expose holders to the full negative return of the worst-performing underlying below the 70.00% barrier. The original issue price includes selling commissions and expected hedging costs, producing an estimated value materially below issue price.
Secondary-market liquidity and pricing will likely be constrained; published JPMS repurchase values may differ from model-derived estimated values during an initial period.