Welcome to our dedicated page for Royal Bank of Canada SEC filings (Ticker: RYLBF), 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.
Royal Bank of Canada filings document the bank's foreign private issuer reports, capital-market securities activity, shareholder governance and periodic financial disclosure. Form 6-K submissions identify the bank as a Form 40-F registrant and include materials incorporated by reference into its Form F-3 shelf registration statement.
The filing record covers senior global medium-term note issuances, legal and tax opinions for registered notes, annual meeting notices, management proxy circulars, proxy forms, financial statements and MD&A requests. Governance disclosures include voting results, director elections, auditor appointment matters, executive compensation advisory votes and shareholder proposals.
Royal Bank of Canada describes several risk and capital management items. For its unconsolidated structured entities, total assets of these vehicles represent the maximum assets that may need to be purchased under outstanding purchase commitments, and the bank notes that its maximum exposure to loss largely comes from investments, loans, derivatives, and liquidity and credit enhancement facilities.
The bank reports that balances it must maintain due to regulatory or contractual requirements with central banks and other counterparties were $3 billion as at October 31, 2025, compared with $2 billion a year earlier and $3 billion two years earlier. It also details subordinated notes that qualify as Tier 2 capital because they include non‑viability contingent capital provisions, which force conversion into common shares if regulators deem the bank non‑viable or a qualifying government capital injection occurs.
RBC also redeemed $1,500 million of 2.88% subordinated debentures due 2029 on December 23, 2024 and $1,250 million of 2.088% subordinated debentures due 2030 on June 30, 2025, paying 100% of principal plus accrued interest. The bank outlines that several outstanding notes pay interest at a stated rate until their earliest par value redemption date and then reset to margins above Daily Compounded CORRA or the Tokyo Overnight Average Rate mid‑swap rate.
Royal Bank of Canada describes several risk and capital management items. For its unconsolidated structured entities, total assets of these vehicles represent the maximum assets that may need to be purchased under outstanding purchase commitments, and the bank notes that its maximum exposure to loss largely comes from investments, loans, derivatives, and liquidity and credit enhancement facilities.
The bank reports that balances it must maintain due to regulatory or contractual requirements with central banks and other counterparties were $3 billion as at October 31, 2025, compared with $2 billion a year earlier and $3 billion two years earlier. It also details subordinated notes that qualify as Tier 2 capital because they include non‑viability contingent capital provisions, which force conversion into common shares if regulators deem the bank non‑viable or a qualifying government capital injection occurs.
RBC also redeemed $1,500 million of 2.88% subordinated debentures due 2029 on December 23, 2024 and $1,250 million of 2.088% subordinated debentures due 2030 on June 30, 2025, paying 100% of principal plus accrued interest. The bank outlines that several outstanding notes pay interest at a stated rate until their earliest par value redemption date and then reset to margins above Daily Compounded CORRA or the Tokyo Overnight Average Rate mid‑swap rate.
Royal Bank of Canada filed a Form 13F-HR holdings report. The filing lists a Form 13F Information Table Value Total of $610,244,854,000 across a Form 13F Information Table Entry Total of 27,742. The report identifies Number of Other Included Managers: 19 and is marked as a 13F HOLDINGS REPORT. The report was signed by Terry Fallon, MD, Head of Regulatory Services.
Royal Bank of Canada filed a Form 13F-HR holdings report. The filing lists a Form 13F Information Table Value Total of $610,244,854,000 across a Form 13F Information Table Entry Total of 27,742. The report identifies Number of Other Included Managers: 19 and is marked as a 13F HOLDINGS REPORT. The report was signed by Terry Fallon, MD, Head of Regulatory Services.
Royal Bank of Canada filed a Form 6-K noting the issuance of Senior Global Medium-Term Notes, Series J, under its shelf registration on Form F-3. The filing primarily provides supporting legal and tax opinions: U.S. counsel Sullivan & Cromwell LLP opined on validity and U.S. federal income tax matters, while Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP addressed Canadian, Ontario and Québec law and Canadian federal income tax matters. Consents for these opinions are included. The report is signed by Executive Vice-President and Treasurer Jason Drysdale.
Royal Bank of Canada filed a Form 6-K noting the issuance of Senior Global Medium-Term Notes, Series J, under its shelf registration on Form F-3. The filing primarily provides supporting legal and tax opinions: U.S. counsel Sullivan & Cromwell LLP opined on validity and U.S. federal income tax matters, while Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP addressed Canadian, Ontario and Québec law and Canadian federal income tax matters. Consents for these opinions are included. The report is signed by Executive Vice-President and Treasurer Jason Drysdale.
Royal Bank of Canada filed a Form 6-K reporting the issuance of two NVCC capital instruments. The bank issued 6.500% Limited Recourse Capital Notes, Series 7 (subordinated, non-viability contingent capital) due November 24, 2085, and Non-Cumulative 5-Year Fixed Rate Reset First Preferred Shares, Series BZ (also NVCC). The filing includes legal opinions from Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP on corporate and Canadian federal income tax matters and related exhibits tied to the bank's shelf registration on Form F-3 (File No. 333-275898).
The prospectus supplement describes equity-linked notes maturing September 12, 2025 that may tie returns to one or more equity indices, ETFs or securities and explains that principal is not guaranteed and investors could lose all or a substantial portion of their investment. It identifies RBC Capital Markets, LLC or an affiliate as the expected calculation agent with broad discretion to determine closing prices, market disruptions, successor indices or funds, and adjustments to Price Multipliers for corporate events such as splits, dividends, reorganizations, delistings or nationalizations. The document also details market, liquidity, volatility, foreign, and tax withholding risks and procedures for anti-dilution and other contract adjustments, and states holders may request information about adjustments from the calculation agent.