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Royal Bank of Canada is offering $600,000 of Auto-Callable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes with a memory coupon linked to the Class A common stock of Robinhood Markets, Inc. The notes pay a contingent coupon of $51.875 per $1,000 each quarter (20.75% per year) when the stock closes at or above the coupon threshold.
The initial underlier value is $87.07, with both the coupon threshold and barrier set at 50% of that level, or $43.54. If the notes are not called and the final stock value is at or above the barrier, investors receive full principal back plus any due coupons; below the barrier, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the stock decline, potentially down to zero.
The notes are issued at 100% of principal, with no underwriting commission, but the initial estimated value is $960.09 per $1,000, reflecting structuring and hedging costs. Payments depend entirely on Robinhood’s share performance and Royal Bank of Canada’s credit, and investors face the risk of losing a substantial portion or all of their principal at maturity.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering $791,000 of Auto-Callable Contingent Coupon Buffer Notes with Memory Coupon linked to the worst performer of Johnson & Johnson, Merck & Co., Inc. and UnitedHealth Group Incorporated. The Notes are unsecured RBC debt, not insured by Canadian or U.S. deposit insurers.
The Notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $9.875 per $1,000 (11.85% per annum) only if each stock stays at or above 70% of its initial value on the observation date; missed coupons can be paid later if conditions are met. The Notes may be automatically called quarterly if all underliers are at or above their initial values, returning $1,000 plus due coupons. If held to the August 9, 2027 maturity and the least-performing stock finishes below 80% of its initial value, principal is reduced in line with the loss beyond a 20% buffer, and investors could lose a substantial portion of their investment. The initial estimated value is $979.54 per $1,000, below the public price, reflecting fees and hedging costs.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the common stock of SLB N.V. (SLB Limited). The notes are priced at 100% of principal, with 1.50% underwriting discounts and 98.50% of proceeds to Royal Bank of Canada.
The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $9.208 per $1,000 (0.9208% per month, 11.05% per year) only when SLB’s closing value is at or above 70% of its initial value. If SLB finishes below this 70% barrier at maturity and the notes have not been called, principal is reduced one-for-one with the underlier loss, up to a total loss. The initial estimated value is expected between $917 and $967 per $1,000, below the public offering price, reflecting fees and hedging costs.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable contingent coupon barrier notes linked to the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. The notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon of $27.125 per $1,000 in principal (10.85% per annum) only if each index stays at or above 70% of its initial level on the observation dates.
The notes can be automatically called quarterly starting in August 2026 if all three indices are at or above their initial values, returning $1,000 plus the applicable coupon. If not called, principal is protected at maturity only if the worst-performing index is at or above 60% of its initial value; below that level, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the loss in the worst index, and investors can lose most or all of their principal. The initial estimated value per $1,000 is expected to range from $932 to $982, below the public offering price, reflecting dealer compensation, hedging costs and Royal Bank of Canada’s funding rate.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering Auto-Callable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes with a memory coupon linked to the worst performer among the Russell 2000 Index, VanEck Semiconductor ETF and State Street Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF.
The Notes pay a contingent coupon of $25 per $1,000 (2.50% per quarter, 10.00% per year) only if, on each quarterly observation date, all three underliers are at or above 70% of their initial values. Missed coupons can be paid later if conditions are met, but may never be received.
The Notes are auto-callable: if on a call observation date all underliers are at or above their initial values, investors receive $1,000 per Note plus the coupon and any unpaid coupons, and the Notes terminate early.
At maturity, if not called, investors get $1,000 per Note plus any due coupons if the least performing underlier is at or above 60% of its initial value. If it is below 60%, principal is reduced one-for-one with the underlier loss, potentially to zero. The initial estimated value is expected to be between $858 and $908 per $1,000, below the public issue price, reflecting fees and hedging costs. All payments are subject to RBC’s credit risk.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering unsecured Enhanced Return Buffer Notes linked to an equally weighted basket of four equity indices: MSCI EAFE, MSCI Emerging Markets, EURO STOXX 50 and TOPIX. The notes are part of its Senior Global Medium-Term Notes, Series J.
The notes run from a February 11, 2026 issue date to a February 8, 2030 maturity. The initial Basket Value is set to 100, with a 20% downside buffer (Buffer Value 80) and a 123.35% participation rate in any positive basket performance, so gains are amplified above zero return.
If the Final Basket Value is at or above the Initial Basket Value, investors receive principal plus the amplified upside. If it is between the Initial Basket Value and the Buffer Value, principal is returned. Below the Buffer Value, principal is reduced in line with losses beyond 20%, so investors can lose a substantial portion of capital.
The price to the public is 100% of principal, with underwriting discounts and commissions of 0.60% and proceeds to Royal Bank of Canada of 99.40%. The initial estimated value is expected between $935 and $985 per $1,000, reflecting funding and hedging costs. The notes are not insured, are not bail-inable, and all payments depend on Royal Bank of Canada’s credit.
Royal Bank of Canada plans to issue fixed coupon barrier notes linked to the worst performer of Bank of America and Caterpillar common stock, maturing on August 21, 2026. The notes pay a fixed coupon of $49.167 per $5,000 each month, equal to 0.9833% monthly or 11.80% per year, regardless of underlier performance.
At maturity, investors receive their $5,000 principal back per note if the least performing stock is at or above its barrier, set at 70% of its initial value. If the least performing stock finishes below this barrier, investors receive shares of that stock instead of cash, based on a physical delivery amount, and may suffer substantial or total principal loss.
The initial estimated value is expected between $4,662.50 and $4,912.50 per $5,000, below the public offering price, reflecting fees, hedging costs and RBC’s funding rate. The notes are unsecured RBC debt, not insured by deposit insurance, not bail-inable, and carry complex and uncertain U.S. tax treatment, including potential withholding for non‑U.S. holders.
Royal Bank of Canada is issuing Bearish Performance Leveraged Upside Principal at Risk Securities (“Bearish PLUS”) linked inversely to the S&P 500 Index, maturing on February 16, 2027. The aggregate principal amount is $3,025,000, at $1,000 per note.
If the S&P 500 final value is below the initial level of 6,917.81, investors receive principal plus 300% of the inverse index return, capped at a maximum payment of $1,454 (145.40% of principal) per note. If the index rises, maturity payments fall one-for-one with the index gain and can be reduced to zero, so principal is fully at risk.
The notes pay no interest, are not listed on an exchange, and all payments depend on the credit of Royal Bank of Canada. The initial estimated value is $971.90 per note, below the $1,000 public offering price, reflecting fees, commissions and hedging costs.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering auto-callable enhanced return barrier notes linked to an equally weighted basket of AMD, Broadcom, Marvell Technology, NVIDIA and Oracle. Each note has a $1,000 minimum denomination, with a barrier at 65% of the initial basket value and a 150% participation rate if held to maturity.
The notes may be automatically called in March 2027 if the basket is at or above its initial value, paying at least 120% of principal. If not called, principal is protected at maturity so long as the final basket value stays at or above the 65% barrier, but investors can lose most or all of principal if the basket finishes below that level. The initial estimated value will range between $912.23 and $962.23 per $1,000, below the public offering price, and all payments are subject to RBC’s credit risk and complex tax treatment.
Royal Bank of Canada is offering $750,000 of Auto-Callable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes linked to the worst performer of NVIDIA and Tesla common stock, maturing on February 7, 2029. The notes pay a contingent coupon of $55.625 per $1,000 (5.5625% per quarter, 22.25% per annum) only when, on a quarterly observation date, both underliers close at or above their coupon thresholds.
The NVDA underlier has an initial value of $185.61 and a coupon threshold and barrier of $102.09, while the TSLA underlier starts at $421.81 with a threshold and barrier of $232.00, each equal to 55% of its initial value. If, on a call observation date, both underliers are at or above their initial values, the notes are automatically called and repay $1,000 plus the coupon. If not called and the final value of the least performing underlier is below its barrier, repayment at maturity is reduced dollar-for-dollar with that underlier’s loss, potentially to zero, so investors can lose a substantial portion or all of principal. The price to the public is 100.00% of principal, with proceeds to Royal Bank of Canada of 99.00%, and an initial estimated value of $976.77 per $1,000.