[424B2] JPMORGAN CHASE & CO Prospectus Supplement
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC priced $2,470,000 of auto callable notes linked to the MerQube US Tech+ Vol Advantage Index on June 10, 2026, expected to settle on or about June 15, 2026. Each note has a $1,000 denomination, a 100% participation rate and six early Review Dates beginning June 14, 2027. The Index level used as the Initial Value was 13,981.55 on the Pricing Date.
The Index is subject to a 6.0% per annum daily deduction and a notional financing cost that reduce index performance. If a Review Date (other than the final Review Date) meets or exceeds the Call Value, notes are automatically called and pay principal plus a Call Premium (first Review Date: $90 per note; sixth Review Date: $540 per note). If not called, maturity pays principal plus any positive Index Return × Participation Rate, subject to issuer and guarantor credit risk.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insights
Auto-call structure trades early-exit premium for capped early returns and index drag.
The notes offer staged early-call premiums (first to sixth Review Dates: $90 to $540) and a 100% Participation Rate, but the Index includes a 6.0% per annum daily deduction plus a notional financing cost. These deductions materially reduce the Index’s net appreciation available to noteholders and are primary drivers of the notes' priced economics, including the $910.10 estimated value versus the $1,000 issue price.
Secondary-market liquidity is limited and repurchase behavior is discretionary; the notes are designed to be held to maturity or until an automatic call. Timing of any early call will determine realized outcome for investors.
Payments depend on JPMorgan Financial and JPMorgan Chase & Co. creditworthiness.
The notes are unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Any payment is subject to the issuer’s and guarantor’s credit risk; holders relying on principal repayment at maturity must consider the corporate-credit exposure.
JPMorgan Financial is a finance subsidiary with limited independent assets; in a resolution scenario, recovery depends on the guarantee and ranks pari passu with other unsecured obligations.
Tax treatment: notes treated as contingent payment debt instruments for U.S. federal income tax purposes.
Special counsel opines the notes will be treated as contingent payment debt instruments, requiring accrual of original issue discount using a comparable yield of 4.81%. The projected payment schedule implies a single projected payment of $1,394.81 per $1,000 note for tax accrual purposes.
Section 871(m) withholding was considered; the issuer’s determinations are disclosed but not binding on the IRS. Consult a tax adviser for individual treatment.