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 $6,726,000 of senior market-linked notes that pay a contingent coupon and may be called early based on equity index performance. Each $1,000 security offers an 11.00% per annum contingent coupon, paid quarterly only if the lowest of the Russell 2000, Nasdaq-100 and EURO STOXX 50 is at or above 75% of its starting level on the relevant determination date.
The notes can be automatically called from June 2026 through September 2029 if that lowest-performing index is at or above its starting level, returning face value plus a final coupon. If not called, principal is protected at maturity only if the lowest index remains at or above 75% of its starting level; below that, investors lose more than 25% and possibly all of principal. Investors do not participate in any index upside, face full credit risk of CIBC, and the bank’s estimated value of each note is $976.75 versus a $1,000 original offering price.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering Senior Global Medium-Term Notes that are auto-callable, contingent-coupon securities linked to the lowest performing of the S&P 500, Russell 2000 and EURO STOXX 50 indices, maturing on January 2, 2030.
Each security has a $1,000 face amount and pays a quarterly contingent coupon at an annual rate of 8.50% only if the lowest performing index on the relevant determination date is at or above its coupon threshold level, set at 70% of its starting level. From June 2026 to September 2029, the notes are automatically called at par plus the coupon if the lowest performing index is at or above its starting level.
If not called, investors receive $1,000 back at maturity only if the lowest performing index on the final calculation day is at or above its downside threshold level, also 70% of its starting level; otherwise, principal is reduced one-for-one with the index decline and investors can lose most or all of their investment. The total offering is $3,047,000, with an underwriting discount of $23.25 per security and an estimated value of $967.90 per security. The notes are unsecured, subject to CIBC’s credit risk, and are not insured or exchange-listed.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering $2,628,000 of Capped Trigger Performance Leveraged Upside Securities linked to the S&P 500 Index, maturing January 5, 2032. These unsecured notes pay no interest and expose investors to leveraged upside of 127.05% of index gains, capped at a maximum payment of $1,750 per $1,000 note. If the index is flat or down but above the 85% trigger level at maturity, investors receive their $1,000 principal back. If the index ends below the trigger level, repayment falls in line with the full index loss, and investors can lose all of their investment. The notes are subject to CIBC’s credit risk, will not be listed on any exchange, and may have limited or no secondary market. The initial estimated value is $947.10 per note, below the $1,000 price to the public, reflecting selling, structuring and hedging costs.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering Digital S&P 500® Index-Linked Notes that are unsecured, do not pay interest and are linked to the S&P 500 Index. Each note has a $1,000 principal amount and a term expected to be about 25–28 months.
At maturity, for each $1,000 note you receive a fixed maximum settlement amount expected to be between $1,147.90 and $1,174.00 if the S&P 500 final level is at least 85.00% of its initial level. If the index falls more than 15.00%, your payoff is reduced using a buffer rate of approximately 117.65%, and you can lose some or all of your principal.
The notes are subject to the credit risk of CIBC, will not be listed on any exchange, and their estimated value on the trade date is expected to be between $977.90 and $997.90 per $1,000 note, which is lower than the issue price due to selling, structuring and hedging costs.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering $6,877,000 of senior unsecured market-linked notes that are auto-callable and tied to the lowest performing of the S&P 500, Russell 2000 and Nasdaq‑100 indices. Each security has a $1,000 face amount and original offering price, with an underwriting discount of $23.25 and proceeds to CIBC of $976.75 per security, which also matches the bank’s estimated value on the pricing date.
The notes pay a 10.00% per annum contingent coupon, evaluated quarterly, only if the lowest performing index on the determination date is at or above its coupon threshold, set at 75% of its starting level for each index. From June 2026 to September 2029, if on any call observation date the lowest performing index is at or above its starting level, the notes are automatically called at par plus the applicable coupon.
If the notes are not called and on the final calculation day the lowest performing index is below its downside threshold (also 75% of its starting level), investors lose principal in line with that index’s decline and can lose the entire $1,000. There is no upside participation in any index and no dividends, and all payments depend on CIBC’s creditworthiness.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is issuing senior global medium-term market-linked notes tied to the lowest performing of the S&P 500 Index, Russell 2000 Index and Nasdaq-100 Index, with an original offering of $11,023,000.00 at $1,000 per security. The notes pay a 9.00% per annum contingent coupon, due quarterly only if the lowest performing index on each determination date stays at or above 70% of its starting level, and are subject to automatic call from June 2026 if that index is at or above its starting level.
If the notes are not called, investors receive full principal at maturity only if the lowest performing index on the final calculation day is at or above its downside threshold level, set at 70% of its starting level; otherwise principal is reduced in line with that index’s decline and can fall to zero. The securities are unsecured obligations of CIBC, carry full issuer credit risk, have an estimated value of $976.75 per security below the issue price, and generate net proceeds to CIBC of $10,766,715.25 after underwriting discounts.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering Capped Leveraged Buffered S&P 500® Index‑Linked Notes, which are unsecured debt linked to the S&P 500 Index rather than paying interest. Each note has a $1,000 principal amount and a term expected to be about 25–28 months.
At maturity, if the S&P 500 has risen, investors receive $1,000 plus 150% of the index gain, but this is capped at a maximum settlement amount expected between $1,216.15 and $1,254.25 per note. If the index is flat or down by up to 15%, investors get back $1,000. If the index falls more than 15%, principal is reduced using a buffer rate of about 117.65% of the loss beyond that level, and investors can lose all of their investment.
The notes are subject to the credit risk of CIBC, pay no interest, are not insured by any deposit insurer, and will not be listed on an exchange. CIBC’s estimated value on the trade date is expected to be between $975.50 and $995.50 per $1,000 note, reflecting selling, structuring and hedging costs.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering senior unsecured market-linked notes tied to the Nasdaq-100 Index®, with a face amount of $1,000 per security and a scheduled maturity on February 1, 2030. The notes pay no interest and may be automatically called on set observation dates if the index is at or above its starting level, paying back the face amount plus a fixed call premium of at least 8.00%, 16.00%, 24.00% or 32.00% depending on whether they are called in 2027, 2028, 2029 or on the final calculation day in 2030.
If the notes are not called, investors receive the full face amount at maturity as long as the index has not fallen by more than 10%. Below that threshold, repayment is reduced 1-for-1 with index losses beyond 10%, so investors may lose up to 90% of principal. The estimated value on the pricing date is expected to be at least $926.70 per security, versus the $1,000 original offering price, reflecting selling, structuring and hedging costs and an internal funding rate. An underwriting discount of up to $28.25 per security will be paid to Wells Fargo Securities. All payments depend on CIBC’s credit and the notes will not be listed on any exchange.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering $5,735,000 of Trigger Autocallable Contingent Yield Notes linked to the Russell 2000® Index and the Nasdaq-100 Index®, maturing on January 3, 2029.
The notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon at 9.92% per annum only if both indexes are at or above 70% of their initial levels on each determination date. Starting June 29, 2026, the notes are automatically called if both indexes are at or above their initial levels, returning principal plus that quarter’s coupon.
If the notes are not called and the worst-performing index finishes at or above 70% of its initial level, investors receive full principal back plus the final coupon. If it finishes below 70%, repayment is reduced in proportion to the loss in that index, and up to 100% of principal can be lost. The notes are senior unsecured obligations of CIBC, are not insured, will not be listed on an exchange, and have an initial estimated value of $9.86 per $10 note, below the issue price.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is offering senior global medium-term notes that are market-linked, auto-callable and carry contingent coupons with a memory feature, tied to the worst performer of Amazon.com, Alphabet Class A and NVIDIA common stock, maturing on January 19, 2029.
Each security has a $1,000 face amount and pays a quarterly contingent coupon at a rate of at least 12.75% per annum only if, on the relevant determination date, the lowest-performing stock is at or above 50% of its starting price; missed coupons can be paid later if conditions are met. The notes are automatically called from July 2026 through October 2028 if the lowest-performing stock is at or above its starting price, returning face amount plus due coupons.
If not called, investors receive $1,000 at maturity only if the lowest-performing stock is at or above 50% of its starting price; otherwise the payoff is proportional to that stock’s decline, with losses of more than 50% and up to a total loss of principal. There is no participation in stock upside and no dividends. The original offering price is $1,000 per security, with a maximum underwriting discount of up to $25.75 and an estimated value of at least $905.70 per security. Payments depend entirely on CIBC’s credit, and the securities are not listed and involve complex structural, market, liquidity and tax risks.