[424B2] JPMORGAN CHASE & CO Prospectus Supplement
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is offering $231,000 of Callable Contingent Interest Notes linked to the least performing of the Russell 2000 Index, the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF and the EURO STOXX 50 Index, maturing on November 29, 2028 and fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $9.1667 per $1,000 (an 11.00% per annum rate) only if, on each Review Date, the closing value of every underlying is at or above 70% of its initial value. JPMorgan may redeem the notes early on specified interest payment dates starting May 29, 2026, paying $1,000 plus any due contingent interest, which would end further payments.
If the notes are not redeemed and, on the final Review Date, any underlying finishes below 60% of its initial value, the maturity payment is reduced in line with the worst performer, and investors can lose more than 40% or even all of principal. The notes are unsecured obligations subject to the credit risk of both JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and JPMorgan Chase & Co., are not bank deposits or FDIC insured, and their estimated value at pricing was $957.50 per $1,000, below the $1,000 issue price due to selling, structuring and hedging costs.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
FAQ
What is JPMorgan Chase Financial (AMJB) offering in this 424B2 filing?
JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC is issuing $231,000 of Callable Contingent Interest Notes due November 29, 2028, linked to the least performing of the Russell 2000 Index, the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF and the EURO STOXX 50 Index, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
How do the contingent interest payments on the AMJB-linked notes work?
For each $1,000 note, investors receive a Contingent Interest Payment of $9.1667 (an 11.00% per annum rate, 0.91667% per month) on an Interest Payment Date only if, on the related Review Date, the closing value of each underlying is at or above 70% of its Initial Value. If any underlying is below its Interest Barrier, no coupon is paid for that period.
What are the key downside risks of these JPMorgan Callable Contingent Interest Notes?
If the notes are not redeemed early and, on the final Review Date, the Final Value of any underlying is below its 60% Trigger Value, the maturity payment per $1,000 is $1,000 + ($1,000 × Least Performing Underlying Return). This means investors can lose more than 40% and up to 100% of principal. There is also a risk of receiving no interest at all if any underlying stays below its Interest Barrier on every Review Date.
When can JPMorgan redeem these structured notes early and what do investors receive?
JPMorgan may, at its option, redeem the notes early in whole on any Interest Payment Date other than the first five and the final Interest Payment Date, starting on May 29, 2026. In an early redemption, holders receive $1,000 per note plus any applicable Contingent Interest Payment for the preceding Review Date, and no further payments will be made.
How does the credit risk of JPMorgan affect holders of these AMJB notes?
The notes are unsecured and unsubordinated obligations of JPMorgan Chase Financial Company LLC and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. All payments depend on the creditworthiness of both entities; if they default, investors may not receive due amounts and could lose their entire investment.
Why is the estimated value of the JPMorgan notes lower than the issue price?
The estimated value at pricing was $957.50 per $1,000 note, below the $1,000 price to public, because that price includes selling commissions, projected hedging profits or losses and the estimated cost of hedging. These issuance and structuring costs reduce the economic value relative to the issue price.
What underlyings drive returns on these JPMorgan Callable Contingent Interest Notes?
Returns depend on the individual performance of three underlyings: the Russell 2000 Index (small-cap U.S. stocks), the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (regional U.S. banks) and the EURO STOXX 50 Index (large-cap Eurozone stocks). Payments are tied to the least performing underlying, rather than an averaged basket.