Structured products are investment products that consist of a combination of different investment products. An example might be a structured product that combines an option with a bond, share or index. Legally speaking, these are usually corporate bonds, where you hold a receivable against the issuing institution. However, these are not comparable either in terms of how they work or the risks. In addition, structured products are issued on the financial markets and traded as securities. ABN AMRO offers a variety of structured products that differ from each other in their composition, risks and structure. We distinguish between the main products: capital protection products, high-yield notes and other structured products:
Each type of structured product has its own product information. Make sure you have read this product information before deciding to invest in a structured product. The product information can be found in:
A capital protection product is a type of structured product, and consists of a combination of a bond and an option. A capital protection product offers a certain amount of protection for your invested capital at maturity and also offers a chance of earning some returns.
The main characteristics of a capital protection product are:
Capital protection products is the collective term for structured products in which the issuing institution guarantees that they will repay you all or part of the nominal value (your invested capital) at maturity. A capital protection product is a defensive investment product, offering protection for your capital and allowing you to potentially benefit from any increase in the price of an underlying asset.
A high-yield note is a type of structured product and consists of a combination of a bond and an optioncomponent. High yield notes often offer conditional protection in combination with the chance of a predetermined coupon. Examples of high yield notes are:
An autocallable note is a structured investment product that offers you the chance of a relatively high payout (coupon) either during or at the end of the term. However, it is not always certain that the issuing institution will pay the coupon. This depends on how the price of the underlying security has moved. In the event of a favourable price trend, the core feature of an autocallable note is that it is redeemed before the end of the term. You then receive your invested capital, plus the coupon value.
An autocallable note offers the possibility of a predetermined coupon with conditional protection. It has a maturity date, but the autocallable can also end earlier than its maturity. The main characteristics of an autocallable note are:
A memory coupon note is a structured product that gives you the chance of receiving a relatively high coupon. There is a chance of this happening whether market conditions are steady, rising or even falling. A memory coupon note does not involve any capital guarantee.
A memory coupon note offers the chance of a predefined coupon. There is no protection and the memory coupon note ends at maturity. The most important characteristics of a memory coupon note are:
Observation date: During the term of the memory coupon note, there are various observation dates that determine how much the issuing institution will pay you:
Structured products have many different risks. You can read more about this in the products' KIIDs. However, there are two major risks that we will define straight away: the counterparty risk and the bail-in.
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