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Royal Bank of Canada is issuing $4,180,000 of Airbag Autocallable Yield Notes linked to the Class A ordinary shares of Accenture plc. The Notes pay an 11.00% per annum coupon in equal monthly installments regardless of how the Accenture share price performs.
Each $1,000 Note may be automatically called quarterly if Accenture’s closing value is at or above the Initial Underlying Value of $241.65, in which case investors receive $1,000 plus the applicable coupon and the Notes terminate. If the Notes are not called and the Final Underlying Value on February 8, 2027 is at or above the Conversion Price of $205.40, investors receive $1,000 in cash plus the last coupon.
If the Notes are not called and the Final Underlying Value is below the Conversion Price, investors receive the final coupon and about 4.8685 Accenture shares per Note, which may be worth significantly less than $1,000 and could be worthless. The Notes are unsecured obligations of Royal Bank of Canada, are not listed on an exchange, carry UBS selling commissions of $15 per Note, and have an initial estimated value of $980.65, below the $1,000 public offering price.
Royal Bank of Canada is issuing $8,210,000 of Auto-Callable Enhanced Return Geared Buffer Notes linked to an equally weighted basket of CrowdStrike, Microsoft, Palo Alto Networks and Snowflake shares, maturing on February 10, 2028.
The notes may be automatically called on February 19, 2027 if the basket is at or above its initial value, paying $1,201.80 per $1,000 in principal (a 20.18% return). If not called, at maturity investors get geared upside at a 125% participation rate when the basket rises, full principal back if the basket is down by up to 15%, and amplified losses below that buffer via a downside multiplier of about 1.17647. The initial estimated value is $989.82 per $1,000, below the public offering price, and all payments depend on RBC’s creditworthiness.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering $1,000,000 of Auto-Callable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes with Memory Coupon linked to the Russell 2000® Index. Investors pay 100% of principal per note, while RBC receives 99% after a 1% placement fee.
The notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon of $23.325 per $1,000 if, on the relevant observation date, the index closes at or above 75% of its initial value. Missed coupons may be paid later if conditions are met. The notes are automatically called if the index is at or above its initial value on any call observation date, returning $1,000 plus due coupons.
If not called, and the final index value is at or above 75% of the initial level, investors receive $1,000 plus any applicable coupons. If the final value is below this barrier, the maturity payment is reduced one-for-one with the index loss, and investors can lose a substantial portion or all of their principal. The initial estimated value is $993.38 per $1,000, below the public offering price, and all payments are subject to RBC’s credit risk.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering eurozone equity-linked Auto-Callable Enhanced Return Barrier Notes tied to the EURO STOXX 50® Index. The notes can be automatically called in 2027 if the index closes at or above its initial level, paying 111.60% of principal and then terminating.
If not called, holders in 2031 receive leveraged upside at 200% of the index gain, full principal back when the index finishes at or above 75% of its initial level, and one-for-one losses below that barrier, which can mean losing most or all principal. All payments depend on RBC’s credit and there may be limited or no secondary market, with the initial estimated note value between $908.74 and $958.74 per $1,000 principal, below the public offering price.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering complex, unsecured market-linked notes due February 23, 2029, each with a $1,000 face amount. The notes pay a contingent coupon, at a rate of at least 10.40% per annum, only if on each monthly calculation day the lowest performing of the iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF, the MSCI EAFE Index and the Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF is at or above 70% of its starting value.
The notes are auto-callable quarterly starting around six months after issuance if that lowest underlier is at or above its starting value, in which case investors receive $1,000 plus the final coupon and the notes terminate. If not called, and on the final calculation day the lowest underlier is below 70% of its starting value, principal is reduced one-for-one with the underlier’s loss, potentially to zero.
The initial estimated value is expected between $903.50 and $953.50 per note, below the $1,000 offering price, reflecting agent discounts, internal funding and hedging costs. The notes are not insured deposits, carry full RBC credit risk, may have limited or no secondary market, and are intended only for investors who can bear significant loss of principal and variable income.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes with a memory feature linked to the worst-performing of Costco and Goldman Sachs shares. The notes pay a contingent coupon of $22.50 per $1,000 each quarter (a 9.00% annual rate) when both stocks close at or above 56.25% of their initial values on the relevant observation date.
If, on any call observation date, both underliers are at or above their initial values, the notes are automatically redeemed at $1,000 plus any due coupons, ending the investment early. At maturity in February 2029, if never called, investors receive full principal only if the least-performing stock finishes at or above its 56.25% barrier; otherwise repayment is reduced one-for-one with that stock’s loss, potentially to zero. The initial estimated value per $1,000 is expected between $912.50 and $962.50, reflecting fees and hedging costs, and all payments are subject to Royal Bank of Canada’s credit risk.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the least performing of Apple, Disney and Oracle common stocks, maturing on February 15, 2029. The minimum investment is $1,000.
The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $18.625 per $1,000 (about 22.35% per year) only when each underlier closes at or above 60% of its initial value on the relevant observation date. The notes may be automatically called quarterly if all underliers are at or above their initial values, returning principal plus the applicable coupon.
If not called, principal is protected at maturity only if the least performing underlier finishes at or above 50% of its initial value. Below that barrier, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the underlier’s loss, and investors can lose most or all of principal. The price to the public is 100% of principal, with proceeds to RBC of 99.75% after a 0.25% underwriting discount. The initial estimated value is expected between $908 and $958 per $1,000, reflecting structuring and hedging costs.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering unsecured Capped Enhanced Return Dual Directional Buffer Notes linked to the worst performer of Advanced Micro Devices and NVIDIA common stock. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount, a 150% participation rate and a Maximum Upside Return of 125%, capping payment at $2,250 if the weaker stock rises enough.
If the least performing stock is flat or falls by up to 25%, investors receive a positive return equal to the absolute decline, up to 25%. If it falls by more than 25%, principal is reduced beyond that buffer and investors can lose a substantial portion of their investment. The price to the public is 100% of principal, while proceeds to Royal Bank of Canada are 97.75%. The initial estimated value is expected between $875 and $925 per $1,000, reflecting underwriting, funding and hedging costs. Payments depend on Royal Bank of Canada’s credit and the Notes are not insured by any government agency.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering $769,000 of Auto-Callable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes linked to the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH), Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) and Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLU).
The notes pay a contingent quarterly coupon of $31.125 per $1,000 (3.1125% per quarter, 12.45% per year) only if each ETF stays at or above 70% of its initial value on the observation date. Starting about one year after issuance, the notes are automatically called if all three ETFs are at or above their initial values, returning $1,000 plus the coupon.
If the notes are not called and the worst-performing ETF is below its 70% barrier at maturity, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with that ETF’s loss, up to a total loss of principal. The initial estimated value is $938.75 per $1,000, below the public offering price.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to Broadcom Inc. common stock, maturing in May 2027. The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $12.417 per $1,000 (about 1.2417% per month, 14.90% annually) only when Broadcom’s share price is at or above a set threshold.
If, on a monthly call observation date, Broadcom’s closing value is at or above its initial level, the notes are automatically called and repay $1,000 plus the coupon. At maturity, if not called and Broadcom is at or above 53% of its initial value, investors receive full principal back plus any coupon; if it is below 53%, they receive Broadcom shares worth less than principal, potentially all the way down to zero, and all payments depend on RBC’s credit.