Every Class IV and Class V gas giant is, by definition, hot (that's part of the definition of being a Class IV or V gas giant), and a "Jupiter". So from that point of view, every Class IV and Class V gas giant is a "hot Jupiter".
The term is, however, usually applied to gas giants that orbit very close to their stars. The current IAU definition is "a gas giant with an orbital period less than 10 Earth days". Yours has an orbital period of 0.3 Earth days, so it definitely qualifies in that respect as well.
Or to put it another way: that planet could be a lot colder, and a lot further out from its star, and still qualify as a "hot Jupiter".