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.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce filings document a Canadian bank that furnishes U.S. disclosure as a foreign issuer using Form 6-K and Form 40-F reporting. Its records include annual report and management proxy materials, consolidated financial statements, quarterly reports, Sarbanes-Oxley certifications, and disclosures incorporated by reference into Form S-8 and Form F-3 registration statements.
The filings cover governance and capital matters such as director elections, auditor appointment, executive compensation advisory votes, shareholder proposals, stock option plan amendments, by-law amendments, common and Class A preferred share dividends, and earnings coverage on subordinated indebtedness. They also document human-rights and modern-slavery supply-chain reporting and company responses to unsolicited mini-tender offers for CIBC common shares.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) is offering 475,747 units of Autocallable Strategic Accelerated Redemption Securities linked to the VanEck® Gold Miners ETF (GDX). Each note has a $10 face value, settles on 25-Jun-2025 and matures 30-Jun-2028, unless automatically called earlier.
Automatic call feature: If on any Observation Date (18-Jun-2026, 17-Jun-2027, 23-Jun-2028) the ETF closes at or above the Starting Value of 53.51, the note is redeemed for the applicable Call Amount: $12.051 (-1 yr, +20.51%), $14.102 (-2 yr, +41.02%) or $16.153 (-3 yr, +61.53%).
Downside exposure: If the note is not called and the Ending Value is below 53.51, investors incur a 1-to-1 loss on the principal with up to 100% at risk. There is no periodic coupon, dividend entitlement, or principal protection.
Pricing economics: Public offering price is $10.00 per unit; underwriting discount is $0.20 and hedging charge $0.05, leaving $9.80 in proceeds to CIBC. The initial estimated value, based on CIBC’s internal funding rate and models, is $9.667, 3.33% below the offering price.
Credit & liquidity: The notes are senior unsecured obligations of CIBC, subject to its credit risk, not FDIC- or CDIC-insured, and will not be listed on any exchange, resulting in limited secondary-market liquidity.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM) has filed a Free Writing Prospectus for Autocallable Contingent Coupon (with Memory) Barrier Notes linked to the worst-performing stock among Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Tesla (TSLA) and Salesforce (CRM). The notes are senior unsecured debt with a $10 face value, a 2-year term (maturing June 2027) and are subject to CIBC’s credit risk.
Income mechanics: Investors receive a quarterly contingent coupon of $0.625–$0.675 per unit (25–27% p.a.) only if, on the relevant observation date, the worst-performing share price is ≥ 60 % of its start level (Coupon Barrier). Thanks to the “Memory” feature, missed coupons can be recaptured: on any future date that the barrier is met, the coupon formula pays all previously unpaid coupons.
Autocall: Beginning three months after pricing, the notes are automatically redeemed at par plus the current coupon if the worst-performer is ≥ 100 % of its start level (Call Value) on any quarterly call observation date.
Principal repayment: • If not called and the worst-performer closes ≥ 60 % of its start level at final valuation, investors receive par plus the final coupon. • Otherwise, principal is reduced 1-for-1 with the underlying decline, exposing holders to up to 100 % loss.
Pricing & costs: Public offer price is $10.00 per unit (or $9.95 on ≥300,000-unit orders). The initial estimated value is $9.133–$9.596, below offer price due to CIBC’s internal funding rate, hedging costs, a $0.15 sales commission and a $0.05 structuring fee. The notes will not be listed; secondary liquidity is expected to be limited.
Regulatory disclaimers note that the securities are not FDIC/Canada Deposit Insurance Corp. insured and are subject to market and credit risks. Investors should review the detailed risk factors in the term sheet and product supplement STOCK CYN-1.
The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM) filed a routine Form 6-K on 19 June 2025. The submission contains no earnings data, transaction details, or updated outlook. Its sole attachment, Exhibit 99.1, is an updated Board Mandate dated 5 June 2025 that outlines the duties, composition, and oversight responsibilities of CIBC’s board of directors. The filing states that the information is incorporated by reference into multiple existing shelf and employee benefit plan registration statements (Form S-8 File Nos. 333-130283, 333-09874, 333-218913; Form F-3 File Nos. 333-219550, 333-220284, 333-272447, 333-282307). Other than this governance document update, the Form 6-K does not disclose any material events, financial figures, or strategic changes. Accordingly, the filing appears primarily administrative and is unlikely to have an immediate market impact.