For investors who reckon price slumps of the European stocks benchmark EURO STOXX 50® of 51% or more as unlikely during the next five years, the Europe Bonus&Safety 17 certificate represents a suitable investment product without capital protection, but with a substantial safety buffer.
The barrier is set at 49% of the index starting value. Therefore the comfortable safety buffer (distance to the barrier) amounts to 51% at the beginning of the term.
Payout profile:
At the maturity date (November 2022) the Bonus Certificate will be redeemed at the bonus amount of EUR 1,170 per EUR 1,000 nominal value, provided that the index neither touches nor undercuts the barrier of 49%(continuous observation) at any point in time.
In case the barrier was touched or undercut, the bonus mechanism will no longer apply and redemption at the maturity date will be effected according to the performance of the underlying (percentage EURO STOXX 50® index performance from the starting value to the closing price at the final valuation date). Even then the maximum amount remains limited at EUR 1,170 per nominal value and investors do not participate in price increases of the EURO STOXX 50® index beyond the cap.
Key Facts:
- ISIN: AT0000A1YBG3
- Initial valuation date: Oct 31, 2017
- Term: 5 years (maturity date: Nov 2, 2022)
- Public offer in: Austria, Germany, Italy, Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, Slovenia, Croatia
- Listing: Vienna, Frankfurt, Stuttgart
For any additional information you may require do not hesitate to contact us on +43151520484.
The Structured Products Team of Raiffeisen Centrobank
The product described herein is subject to and governed by the Base Prospectus (including all supplements and amendments thereto) approved by the Austrian Financial Market Authority. The Base Prospectus is deposited at Oesterreichische Kontrollbank AG, published on www.rcb.at/SecuritiesProspectus and contains the risks and Terms and Conditions of the product.
Raiffeisen Centrobank AG is subject to supervision by the FMA and the Oesterreichische Nationalbank as well as the ECB, the latter within the Single Supervisory Mechanism (Council Regulation (EU) No 1024/2013).