JPMorgan (JPM) offers callable notes tied to RTY, SMH, IGV through 2031
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering structured, callable notes due June 3, 2031, fully guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes reference the Russell 2000 Index, VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) and iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF (IGV). Pricing is expected on May 29, 2026 with settlement on June 3, 2026. The notes may be automatically called beginning June 4, 2027 if each underlying meets its Call Value; Call Premiums start at $151 per $1,000 on the first Review Date and rise to $755 on the final Review Date. The Barrier Amount is 60.00% of Initial Value; if any Underlying’s Final Value is below the Barrier, maturity payment is reduced by the Least Performing Underlying Return, possibly resulting in loss of more than 40.00% of principal. Estimated value at issue is approximately $907.60 per $1,000 (will not be less than $900.00). Selling commissions will not exceed $41.25 per $1,000. CUSIP: 46661AE30.
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Insights
Notes offer capped upside via scheduled call premiums and downside tied to the least-performing underlying.
The structure provides tiered, predefined Call Premiums per $1,000 that escalate over successive Review Dates, with an automatic call if all Underlyings meet Call Values on a Review Date. The maximum illustrative Call Premium on the final Review Date is $755.00 per $1,000.
Key sensitivities include the relative paths of the three Underlyings and volatility through the final Review Date; early calls truncate term exposure and cap upside to the then-applicable Call Premium. Pricing and estimated value depend on internal funding rates and model inputs at issuance.
Credit exposure is to JPMorgan Financial and its guarantor, JPMorgan Chase & Co.
The notes are unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Financial and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.; payments are therefore subject to the credit risk of both entities. The pricing supplement notes limited independent assets at the finance-subsidiary level.
Market valuation and secondary prices will also reflect changes in issuer/guarantor credit spreads and the internal funding rate used to derive the estimated value. Any default could result in loss of all amounts due under the notes.