JPMorgan (AMJB) issues callable contingent interest notes tied to S&P 500, Dow and semiconductor ETF
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated callable contingent interest notes linked to the least performing of the S&P 500 Index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the VanEck Semiconductor ETF, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Holders may receive monthly Contingent Interest Payments at a rate of at least 13.00% per annum70.00% of their Initial Values. If any underlying is below this barrier on a Review Date, no interest is paid for that period.
The notes are callable at the issuer’s option on specified Interest Payment Dates starting March 19, 2026. At maturity in November 2027, if the notes have not been redeemed early and each underlying finishes at or above its 70.00% Trigger Value, investors receive principal plus the final contingent coupon. If any underlying finishes below its Trigger Value, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the least performing underlying, and investors can lose a significant portion or all of their principal.
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FAQ
What are JPMorgan’s AMJB callable contingent interest notes described in this 424B2?
The notes are structured debt securities issued by JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co., offering contingent interest linked to the least performing of the S&P 500 Index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the VanEck Semiconductor ETF.
How do the contingent interest payments on the AMJB-linked notes work?
For each Review Date, investors receive a Contingent Interest Payment only if the closing value of each underlying is at least 70.00% of its Initial Value. The Contingent Interest Rate is at least 13.00% per annum, paid monthly.
When can these JPMorgan callable contingent interest notes be redeemed early?
The issuer may redeem the notes early, in whole but not in part, on any Interest Payment Date other than the first, second and final ones. The earliest possible early redemption date is March 19, 2026.
What happens at maturity for these AMJB structured notes if markets fall?
If the notes are not redeemed early and the Final Value of any underlying is below its 70.00% Trigger Value, the maturity payment per $1,000 principal is calculated as $1,000 plus $1,000 times the Least Performing Underlying Return, so investors can lose more than 30.00% of principal and up to all of it.
Do investors receive any dividends from the S&P 500, Dow or VanEck Semiconductor ETF?
No. Investors in the notes do not receive dividends on the ETF or the stocks in the indices and have no ownership or voting rights in any underlying security.
What is the estimated value of these JPMorgan contingent interest notes at issuance?
If the notes priced on the date of the example, the estimated value would be approximately $963.80 per $1,000 principal amount, and the final estimated value disclosed at pricing will not be less than $900.00 per $1,000.
What are the main risks of investing in these AMJB-linked notes?
Key risks include potential loss of all principal, the possibility of receiving no interest, exposure to the least performing underlying, issuer and guarantor credit risk, lack of liquidity since the notes will not be listed, and pricing and performance risks tied to the semiconductor-focused ETF.