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 global medium-term notes that pay a fixed 4.45% coupon and are scheduled to mature on January 30, 2031, unless redeemed earlier. Investors receive semi-annual interest payments on January 30 and July 30 of each year, starting July 30, 2026, and repayment of 100% of principal at maturity if the notes have not been called or converted.
CIBC can redeem the notes at its option in whole, but not in part, on January 30 of 2028, 2029 and 2030 at 100% of principal plus accrued interest, creating reinvestment and call risk for investors. The notes are issued in minimum denominations of $1,000, carry an original issue price of $1,000 per note with an underwriting discount of up to $15 per $1,000, and will not be listed on any securities exchange. They are unsecured obligations of CIBC, subject to Canadian bail-in powers that may convert them into common shares or extinguish them in a resolution scenario, and are neither CDIC nor FDIC insured.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering senior unsecured medium-term notes linked to the S&P 500® Index. Each note has a $1,000 principal amount and pays fixed semi-annual interest of at least $30.00 per $1,000 (at least 6.00% per year) until maturity or automatic call, regardless of index performance.
The notes can be called early if, on specified semi-annual observation dates, the index level is at or above its initial level. If called, investors receive principal plus the applicable interest payment, but no further interest, creating reinvestment risk. If held to maturity and the final index level is at or above 80% of the initial level, investors receive full principal back; if it is below that 20% buffer, repayment is reduced so that investors lose 1.25% of principal for each 1.00% index decline beyond 20%, and could lose their entire principal even after interest.
The initial estimated value is expected to be at least $956.50 per $1,000, less than the price to the public, reflecting selling, structuring and hedging costs. The notes are subject to CIBC’s credit risk, are not insured by any deposit insurer, will not be listed on an exchange, may have limited secondary liquidity, and involve complex and uncertain U.S. and Canadian tax treatment.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is issuing senior unsecured medium-term notes that pay a fixed coupon of 5.05% per year, with a potential bonus in the first year linked to Compounded SOFR. From the original issue date to January 29, 2027, interest will be 5.15% if Compounded SOFR on the January 22, 2027 valuation date is below 5.05%, and 5.05% if it is at or above 5.05%. From January 29, 2027 to the expected January 29, 2036 maturity, the rate is 5.05%.
The notes pay interest annually on January 29, beginning in 2027, in minimum denominations of $1,000, and return 100% of principal at maturity if not called and CIBC meets its obligations. CIBC may redeem the notes at par plus accrued interest on each annual interest payment date from January 29, 2031 through January 29, 2035. The price to the public is $1,000 per note, with an underwriting discount of up to $15 and proceeds to CIBC of at least $985 per $1,000. The notes are not insured, will not be listed on any exchange, and their value and payments are subject to CIBC’s credit risk and to SOFR-related benchmark and market risks.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce plans to issue senior global medium-term notes in the form of 4.00% callable notes due January 22, 2029. These notes pay interest at a fixed 4.00% per year, with semi-annual payments on January 22 and July 22 starting July 22, 2026, and return 100% of principal at maturity if they have not been redeemed earlier.
CIBC can redeem the notes early, in whole but not in part, at par plus accrued interest on January 22, 2027 or January 22, 2028. The notes are senior, unsecured obligations of CIBC, are not insured by any deposit insurer, will not be listed on an exchange, and may have limited or no secondary market. They are bail-inable under Canadian bank resolution powers, meaning they can be converted into CIBC common shares or varied or extinguished if regulators act under the CDIC Act, which could lead to partial or total loss of principal and interest. U.S. and Canadian tax sections describe the expected debt treatment for U.S. holders and key Canadian non-resident rules.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering 5-year Trigger GEARS notes linked to the EURO STOXX 50® Index. Each note has a $10 principal amount, with a minimum investment of $1,000. At maturity, if the index return is positive, investors receive $10 plus the index gain multiplied by an Upside Gearing set in a 1.5800–1.7825 range. If the index return is between 0% and -25%, investors receive only the $10 principal. If the index return is below -25%, repayment is reduced 1-for-1 with the index loss, up to a total loss of principal.
The notes pay no interest, do not include dividends from index stocks, and are unsecured senior debt subject to CIBC’s credit risk. They are not insured by CDIC or FDIC and will not be listed on an exchange, so liquidity may be limited. The initial estimated value is expected to be $9.163–$9.563 per $10 note, versus a $10 price to the public, with an underwriting discount of $0.35 and proceeds to CIBC of $9.65 per note.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering $3,566,400 of trigger autocallable notes linked to the S&P 500® Index, maturing on January 18, 2028. The notes can be automatically called quarterly starting July 13, 2026 if the index closes at or above the initial level of 6,963.74, paying $10 principal plus an increasing call return based on an 8.75% per annum rate, up to $11.75 at the final date. If the notes are not called and the final index level is at or above the downside threshold of 5,570.99 (80% of the initial level), investors receive full principal back; below that level, repayment is reduced in line with the index decline, with up to 100% loss of principal. The notes pay no interest, are unsecured and unsubordinated obligations of CIBC, are not insured or exchange-listed, and their initial estimated value is $9.824 per $10.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering trigger autocallable notes linked to the S&P 500 Index with a term of about two years and a minimum investment of $1,000 in $10 denominations. The notes can be automatically called quarterly starting July 13, 2026 if the index closes at or above its initial level, paying a call amount that combines principal plus a call return based on a rate of at least 8.50% per annum.
If the notes are never called and the final index level on January 13, 2028 is at or above a downside threshold set at 80.00% of the initial level, holders receive full principal back at maturity. If the final level is below that threshold, repayment is reduced in proportion to the index decline, up to a total loss of principal. The notes pay no interest, do not participate in any index upside beyond the fixed call return, and expose holders to both S&P 500 market risk and CIBC credit risk. The initial estimated value is expected between $9.610 and $9.810 per $10 note, below the $10.00 price to the public.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) has furnished a Form 6-K as a foreign private issuer for January 2026. The report states that it and its exhibits are incorporated by reference into CIBC’s existing shelf registration statement on Form F-3 (File No. 333-282307), becoming part of that registration from the furnishing date unless later superseded.
The filing’s exhibit index highlights an underwriting agreement dated January 6, 2026 with CIBC World Markets Corp., BNP Paribas Securities Corp., Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC and UBS Securities LLC. It also lists a subordinated debt indenture dated November 5, 2024, a third supplemental indenture dated January 13, 2026, and multiple legal and tax opinions and related consents from Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP and Torys LLP.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering senior unsecured 5.20% callable notes due January 7, 2041 as part of its global medium-term note program. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount, pays interest at a fixed 5.20% per year, and pays coupons semi-annually on January 21 and July 21, starting July 21, 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 January 21 of each year from 2029 through 2040, which could end interest payments earlier than expected. The price to public per Note is $1,000, with an underwriting discount of up to $20, so CIBC receives at least $980 per $1,000 Note before its own costs.
The Notes are not listed on any exchange, are not insured by Canadian or U.S. deposit insurers, and are subject to CIBC’s credit risk. They are also bail-inable under Canadian bank resolution powers, meaning they can be converted into common shares or written down if CIBC becomes non-viable, potentially causing loss of principal and interest.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering $24,862,000 of Digital S&P 500® Index-Linked Notes due February 24, 2028. These unsecured notes do not pay interest and the amount repaid at maturity depends on the S&P 500® Index level on February 22, 2028 versus the initial level of 6,921.46.
If the index is at or above 85% of its initial level, investors receive a fixed $1,175 per $1,000 principal amount, a 17.5% capped gain. If the index falls more than 15%, repayment drops according to a leveraged downside formula and can be reduced to zero, meaning investors can lose their entire investment.
The bank’s estimated value on the trade date is $998.90 per $1,000 note, reflecting selling, structuring and hedging costs. The notes are subject to CIBC’s credit risk, are not insured, and will not be listed on any securities exchange, so liquidity may be limited.