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Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF, maturing on February 17, 2028.
The notes pay a contingent coupon of $10.708 per $1,000 (1.0708% per month, 12.85% per year) on monthly dates only if each underlier closes at or above its coupon threshold, set at 70% of its initial value. Starting about six months after issuance, the notes are automatically called if all underliers are at or above their initial values, returning $1,000 plus the applicable coupon.
If not called, investors receive at maturity $1,000 per note if the least performing underlier is at or above its 70% barrier. If it finishes below the barrier, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the underlier loss, and investors can lose most or all of principal. The price to the public is 100% of principal, with underwriting discounts of 0.50% and issuer proceeds of 99.50%. The initial estimated value is expected between $925 and $975 per $1,000, reflecting hedging costs, funding and fees, and may be lower than secondary market values. Tax treatment is uncertain and the notes carry the issuer’s credit risk.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the Bloomberg US Large Cap VolMax Index, maturing on March 6, 2031. The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $15.208 per $1,000 (18.25% per annum) only when the index closes at or above 70% of its initial value on the relevant observation date.
Starting March 2027, the notes are automatically called if the index is at or above its initial level, returning $1,000 plus the coupon, with no further payments. If held to maturity and the final index value is at or above 60% of its initial level, investors receive full principal back (plus any due coupon). Below 60%, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the index decline, which can result in substantial or total loss of principal.
The initial estimated value is expected between $900 and $950 per $1,000, reflecting dealer discounts, hedging costs and RBC’s funding rate. Returns depend on the leveraged, cost-burdened VolMax index, and all payments are subject to Royal Bank of Canada’s credit risk. The notes are unsecured, not insured by Canadian or U.S. deposit insurance, and involve complex structural and tax risks.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering $1,620,000 of Auto-Callable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes linked to Lam Research Corporation common stock, maturing on February 23, 2027. The notes pay a contingent coupon of $54.75 per $1,000 only if Lam’s stock stays at or above 50% of its initial level on quarterly observation dates.
If on any call observation date Lam’s stock closes at or above the initial value of $213.31, the notes are automatically called and pay $1,000 plus the coupon, with no further payments. At maturity, if not called and the final stock value is at or above the 50% barrier of $106.66, investors receive $1,000 per note plus any coupon.
If the final stock value is below the barrier, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the stock’s decline, and investors can lose most or all of their investment. The public offering price is 100% of principal, with proceeds to Royal Bank of Canada of 99.00% and an initial estimated value of $997.88 per $1,000, which may be higher than secondary market values.
Royal Bank of Canada is issuing $2,918,000 in auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the least performing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq-100 Index and S&P 500 Index, maturing on February 9, 2029.
The notes pay a contingent coupon of $6.25 per $1,000 (0.625% monthly, 7.50% per annum) only when all three indices stay at or above 60% of their initial levels on observation dates, and may be automatically called from February 2027 if each index is at or above its initial level. If not called and the worst-performing index finishes below its 60% barrier, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the index loss, up to full loss of principal.
The price to the public is 100% of principal, with underwriting discounts of 0.15% and net proceeds to RBC of 99.85%. The initial estimated value is $988.08 per $1,000, reflecting hedging costs, selling concessions and RBC’s internal funding rate.
Royal Bank of Canada is issuing $535,000 of auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the worst performer of the Russell 2000 Index, the Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLE) and the Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLV), maturing February 11, 2031.
The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $8.125 per $1,000 (9.75% per year) only if each underlier is at or above 70% of its initial value on the observation date and may be called early if all are at or above their initial levels starting in February 2027.
If not called, principal is protected at maturity only if the least-performing underlier finishes at or above 60% of its initial value; otherwise, repayment is reduced one-for-one with that underlier’s loss, and investors can lose most or all of their principal. The bank’s proceeds are 99.75% of principal, and the initial estimated value of $975.39 per $1,000 is below the issue price, reflecting fees and hedging costs.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the worst performer of the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. The total offering size is $2,709,000 with proceeds to RBC of $2,700,873.
The notes pay a contingent coupon of $10 per $1,000 (1% per month, 12% per year) only when all three indexes are at or above 75% of their initial values on the relevant observation date. The notes can be automatically called quarterly if each index is at or above its initial level, returning principal plus the applicable coupon.
If the notes are not called, principal repayment at maturity depends on the least performing index. Full principal is returned if that index stays at or above 70% of its initial value; below this “barrier,” repayment is reduced one-for-one with the index loss, potentially resulting in a substantial or total loss. The initial estimated value is $990.84 per $1,000, below the public offering price.
Royal Bank of Canada is issuing auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the least-performing of the Russell 2000 Index, the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF and the Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF. The notes are offered at 100% of principal, for a total of $6,636,000.
The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $9.167 per $1,000 (11.00% per annum) only if each underlier stays at or above 70% of its initial value on the observation date. They may be automatically called monthly from August 2026 if all underliers are at or above their initial values.
At maturity, if not called, investors receive full principal back only if the least-performing underlier is at or above 60% of its initial value; below this barrier, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the underlier loss, potentially to zero. The initial estimated value is $992.04 per $1,000, below the public offering price, and all payments are subject to RBC’s credit risk.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering Enhanced Return Buffer Notes linked to an equally weighted basket of the MSCI EAFE, MSCI Emerging Markets, EURO STOXX 50 and TOPIX indices. The total offering size is $500,000, with proceeds to the bank of $497,000.
The Notes run from a February 2026 trade date to a February 2030 maturity. Investors get 124% participation in any positive basket return. A 20% downside buffer protects principal if the basket decline stays within that range; deeper losses reduce principal, and all payments depend on RBC’s credit.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering $750,000 of auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the weaker of the EURO STOXX Banks Index and the SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production ETF.
The notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon of $46.50 per $1,000 (18.60% per year) only if both underliers stay at or above 75% of their initial values on each observation date. They may be automatically called quarterly if both underliers are at or above their initial levels, returning $1,000 plus the coupon.
If the notes are not called and the weaker underlier finishes below its 75% barrier, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the underlier loss, up to full loss of principal. The initial estimated value of $974.49 per $1,000 is below the public offering price, reflecting fees and hedging costs, and secondary market values may be lower. Payments depend on RBC’s credit and carry complex U.S. tax treatment, including ordinary income on coupons and potential withholding for some non-U.S. investors.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering $3,493,000 of senior unsecured market-linked notes tied to the lowest-performing of Apple, Berkshire Hathaway Class B and Northrop Grumman, maturing on February 9, 2029. Each security has a $1,000 face amount and an initial estimated value of $970.56.
The notes pay a 10.15% per annum contingent monthly coupon only if the lowest-performing stock on each calculation day stays at or above its coupon threshold, set at 60% of its starting value. From August 2026 the notes are auto-callable if that lowest-performing stock is at or above its starting value. If not called and the lowest-performing stock ends below its 60% downside threshold, principal repayment falls in line with its decline, potentially to zero. Investors do not participate in any stock upside and are fully exposed to RBC credit risk.