Welcome to our dedicated page for Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce SEC filings (Ticker: CM), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The SEC filings page for Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) (symbol CM) provides access to the bank’s U.S. regulatory disclosures as a foreign private issuer. CIBC files its annual report on Form 40-F and furnishes current reports on Form 6-K under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These documents cover key areas such as audited financial statements, capital markets transactions, governance documents and material news releases.
For investors analyzing CM, the filings include annual financial statements audited under Canadian generally accepted auditing standards and under the standards of the U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, as referenced in a Form 6-K that incorporates the report of the independent registered public accounting firm. Other 6-K filings incorporate information by reference into CIBC’s registration statements on Form F-3 and Form S-8, reflecting the bank’s use of U.S. capital markets for issuing securities and administering equity-based plans.
Recent Form 6-K submissions also attach underwriting agreements for securities offerings, subordinated debt indentures and supplemental indentures, and a Code of Conduct. These documents help users understand CIBC’s funding activities, legal structure for issued securities, and governance framework. Some 6-Ks include news releases on senior executive leadership changes, which are incorporated into the regulatory record.
On Stock Titan, these filings are updated as they are furnished to EDGAR, and AI-powered tools can help explain the content of lengthy documents such as the Form 40-F and related exhibits. Users can quickly identify which filings relate to annual reporting, capital markets transactions, governance or significant news events, and use the structured access to track how CIBC manages its regulatory obligations and cross-border banking operations.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering senior unsecured 4.25% callable notes due February 4, 2030. Each Note has a $1,000 minimum denomination and pays interest at a fixed 4.25% per year, with semi-annual payments on February 4 and August 4, starting August 4, 2026, until maturity or earlier redemption.
CIBC may redeem the Notes in whole, but not in part, at 100% of principal plus accrued interest on February 4 of 2027, 2028, or 2029. The Notes are bail-inable under Canadian bank resolution powers, meaning they can be converted into common shares of CIBC or its affiliates or varied or extinguished if the bank is deemed non-viable, which could result in loss of principal and interest.
The Notes are not insured by Canadian or U.S. deposit insurance schemes, will not be listed on any securities exchange, and are subject to CIBC’s credit risk. The price to the public is $1,000 per Note, with an underwriting discount of up to $10.00 per $1,000 and proceeds to CIBC of at least $990.00 per $1,000; certain fee-based advisory accounts may pay between $990.00 and $1,000.00 per Note.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is issuing $1,500,000 aggregate principal amount of senior unsecured 5.00% Callable Notes due January 23, 2036 under its global medium-term note program. The Notes pay interest at a fixed 5.00% per year, with semi-annual payments on January 23 and July 23, starting July 23, 2026, and repay 100% of principal at maturity if not redeemed earlier.
CIBC may, at its option, redeem the Notes in whole (but not in part) at 100% of principal plus accrued interest on January 23 of each year from 2028 through 2035. The public offering price is $1,000 per Note, with an underwriting discount of $11.83 per $1,000, resulting in proceeds to CIBC of $1,482,255 before expenses. The Notes will not be listed on any exchange and are subject to CIBC’s credit risk.
The Notes are designated as bail-inable debt securities under Canadian law, meaning they can be converted, in whole or in part, into CIBC (or affiliate) common shares or varied or extinguished if Canadian resolution authorities exercise bank resolution powers. The filing highlights risks including early redemption, limited liquidity, potential price volatility, credit risk of the Bank, and complex U.S. and Canadian tax and bail-in considerations.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is issuing $2,453,000 of senior unsecured 4.20% Callable Notes due January 22, 2030. Investors receive semi-annual interest payments on January 22 and July 22, starting July 22, 2026, with principal repaid at maturity if the notes are not redeemed earlier.
CIBC may redeem the notes at 100% of principal plus accrued interest, in whole but not in part, on January 22 of 2027, 2028 or 2029. The notes are part of CIBC’s global medium-term note program, are not insured by any deposit insurer and will not be listed on an exchange, so liquidity may be limited.
The notes are designated as bail-inable debt securities, meaning they can be converted into CIBC (or affiliate) common shares or varied or extinguished under Canadian bank resolution powers if the bank becomes non-viable, which could result in loss of all or part of the investment. The original issue price is $1,000 per note, with CIBC receiving approximately $2.43 million in proceeds after underwriting discounts.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering Digital S&P 500® Index-Linked Notes due May 10, 2028, with a total principal amount of $6,546,000. The notes do not pay interest and your return depends entirely on the S&P 500® Index level on the May 8, 2028 determination date.
For each $1,000 note, if the index finish level is at least 85.00% of the initial level of 6,940.01, you receive a fixed $1,187.40, capping your upside. If the index falls more than 15.00%, your payoff drops below $1,000 based on a buffer rate of approximately 117.65%, and you can lose up to your entire investment.
The notes are unsecured obligations of CIBC, are not insured by any deposit insurance agency, and will not be listed on an exchange. The price to the public is 100.00% of principal with no agent’s commission, and CIBC’s estimated value on the trade date is $995.30 per $1,000, reflecting embedded selling, structuring and hedging costs.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) is issuing $10,000,000 of senior unsecured 4.00% callable notes maturing on January 22, 2029. Investors receive semi-annual interest at 4.00% per year, paid on January 22 and July 22, starting July 22, 2026, with a minimum denomination of $1,000 per note.
CIBC may redeem the notes early, in whole but not in part, at 100% of principal plus accrued interest on January 22, 2027 or January 22, 2028. The notes are issued at 100.00% of principal to the public, with an underwriting discount of $5.50 per $1,000 and expected proceeds to CIBC of $9,945,000.
The notes are bail-inable debt securities, meaning they can be converted into CIBC common shares or varied or extinguished under Canadian bank resolution powers if CIBC becomes non-viable. They are not insured by Canadian or U.S. deposit insurance, will not be listed on any exchange, and carry risks related to CIBC’s credit, limited liquidity, potential price declines in secondary trading, conflicts of interest, and complex U.S. and Canadian tax treatment.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering capped leveraged buffered notes linked to the S&P 500® Index, maturing in January 2028. Each note has a $1,000 principal amount and provides 200% upside exposure to Index gains, but returns are capped at a Maximum Return of at least 23.10%, set on the trade date.
If the Index falls, a 10% buffer absorbs the first 10% of losses; below that, investors lose 1% of principal for each additional 1% Index decline, for a potential loss of up to 90% of principal. The notes pay no interest, are unsecured senior debt of CIBC, and will not be listed on any exchange. The initial estimated value is expected to be between $976.80 and $996.80 per $1,000, reflecting embedded costs and hedging.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) is offering two new series of senior unsecured U.S. dollar notes under a preliminary prospectus supplement: floating rate senior notes and fixed-to-floating rate senior notes. The floating rate notes pay interest quarterly at a rate tied to compounded SOFR plus a margin until maturity. The fixed-to-floating notes pay a fixed rate semi-annually until a reset date in 2026, then switch to a quarterly floating rate based on compounded SOFR plus a margin until maturity.
The notes rank equally with CIBC’s other unsecured and unsubordinated debt, are not covered by any sinking fund, and will not be insured by Canadian or U.S. deposit insurers. They are designated as “bail-inable notes,” meaning they can be converted into common shares or written down under Canadian bank resolution powers if the bank becomes non-viable. The notes are expected to clear through DTC, Clearstream and Euroclear, will not be listed on an exchange, and may be redeemed early by CIBC in several circumstances. CIBC expects to use the net proceeds for general corporate purposes.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) is offering 1,977,113 market-linked notes, called Autocallable Strategic Accelerated Redemption Securities, at $10.00 per unit, for total public offering proceeds of $19,771,130.00. The notes are linked to the Russell 2000® Index and may be automatically called on scheduled Observation Dates if the Index is at or above the Starting Value of 2,674.557, paying call amounts between $10.835 and $14.175 per unit depending on the year.
If the notes are not called and the Ending Value is at or above the Threshold Value of 2,273.373 (85.00% of the Starting Value), investors receive only the $10.00 principal back. If the Index falls below the Threshold Value at maturity, investors have 1‑to‑1 downside exposure beyond the 15.00% buffer, with up to 85.00% of principal at risk. The notes pay no periodic interest, offer limited liquidity, and all payments depend on CIBC’s credit. The initial estimated value is $9.70 per unit, below the public offering price.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering Autocallable Leveraged Index Return Notes linked to the Russell 2000 Index. The notes are issued in 445,195 units at $10 principal per unit, for a total public offering price of $4,451,950, with proceeds to CIBC of $9.80 per unit after a $0.20 underwriting discount.
The notes have a scheduled maturity of January 26, 2029 and an observation date on January 22, 2027. They are automatically called at $11.00 per unit (including a $1.00 call premium) if the Index is at or above the Starting Value of 2,674.557 on the observation date. If not called, at maturity investors receive principal back if the Ending Value is at or above the Starting Value, or gain 203.00% of any Index increase; if the Index declines, losses match the Index decline on a 1-to-1 basis, up to 100% loss of principal.
The initial estimated value is $9.728 per unit, below the $10 offering price, reflecting CIBC’s internal funding rate, a $0.20 underwriting discount, and a $0.05 hedging-related charge. The notes pay no interest, do not provide dividends, are unsecured obligations of CIBC, and have limited expected secondary market liquidity, exposing investors to both market risk in the Index and CIBC’s credit risk.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is issuing senior unsecured market‑linked notes tied to the lowest performer among Amazon, Alphabet Class A, and NVIDIA, maturing January 19 2029. The notes are sold at $1,000 each, for a total offering of $8,002,000, with an underwriting discount of $23.25 per note and proceeds to CIBC of about $7.8 million. Investors can receive quarterly contingent coupons at 12.75% per annum only if, on each determination date, the lowest‑performing stock is at or above its coupon threshold, set at 50% of its starting price, with missed coupons potentially paid later under a “memory” feature.
The notes are auto‑callable quarterly from July 2026 through October 2028 if the lowest stock is at or above its full starting price, in which case investors get principal plus the due coupon(s). If never called, principal is repaid at maturity only if the lowest stock stays at or above its 50% downside threshold; otherwise, investors lose more than half, up to all, of principal and do not share in any stock gains. The securities are not listed, pay no dividends, and all payments depend on CIBC’s credit. CIBC’s own estimated value is $947.30 per note, below the $1,000 issue price.