Welcome to our dedicated page for Toronto Domin SEC filings (Ticker: TD), 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 Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) is a foreign private issuer in the United States and files regulatory reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, primarily on Form 6-K and Form 40-F. This SEC filings page brings together those disclosures for investors who want to review the bank’s official communications, capital markets documentation and other regulatory materials related to its North American banking operations.
Recent Form 6-K filings for TD include earnings-related information such as earnings coverage, quarterly earnings news releases, dividend news releases, notices of shareholder meetings and independent auditor’s reports. These documents provide insight into the bank’s financial reporting, dividend practices and governance processes. Certain Form 6-K reports are explicitly incorporated by reference into TD’s registration statements on Form F-3/A, which support securities offerings in the U.S. market.
The filings also cover capital markets and funding activities. Examples include underwriting agreements, base indentures and supplemental indentures, as well as legal opinions and consents from U.S. and Canadian counsel. Other 6-Ks reference material change reports, the redemption of non-cumulative rate reset preferred shares, and the pricing of subordinated debentures, illustrating how the bank manages its capital structure and funding instruments.
Because TD is a large North American commercial bank with operations in Canada and the U.S., its SEC filings can be extensive and technical. Stock Titan enhances access to these documents by providing real-time updates from EDGAR and AI-powered summaries that explain the purpose and key points of each filing in plain language. Investors can use this page to locate TD’s 6-K reports, understand how they connect to broader registration statements, and monitor ongoing regulatory and capital markets activity for The Toronto-Dominion Bank.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) has filed a 424(b)(2) pricing supplement for Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least-performing of the Nasdaq-100 (NDX), Russell 2000 (RTY) and S&P 500 (SPX). The notes are senior unsecured obligations of TD, denominated in USD, with a 5-year scheduled term maturing on or about 11 July 2030, unless TD exercises its monthly call option from the third interest period onward. Investors will receive a contingent coupon of ~9.35% p.a. (paid monthly) only if, on each observation date, all three indices close at or above 70 % of their initial levels (the Contingent Interest Barrier). If any index closes below its barrier on an observation date, no coupon is paid for that period.
If TD calls the notes, holders receive par plus the accrued coupon; otherwise, final repayment depends on index performance at maturity. Principal is protected only when every index remains ≥70 % of its initial level on the final valuation date. Should any index finish below its barrier, investors incur a loss matching the worst-performing index’s percentage decline, up to a 100 % loss of principal.
The public offering price is $1,000 per note; estimated value is $940–$975, reflecting a 0.75 % underwriting discount and embedded hedging costs. The notes are unlisted, lack secondary-market liquidity, expose holders to TD credit risk and feature complex tax treatment. Detailed risk factors highlight reinvestment risk due to the issuer call, market volatility of multiple indices, and the possibility of zero income and significant capital loss.