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 is issuing Capped Leveraged Contingent Absolute Return Buffered Notes linked to United Parcel Service, Inc. common stock. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount and offers 500.00% leveraged upside on any increase in UPS stock, capped at a Maximum Upside Redemption Amount of $1,470.00.
If UPS falls but finishes at or above 90.00% of the Initial Value, investors receive a positive “contingent absolute” return up to 10.00%. If UPS closes below the $95.598 Buffer Value, holders receive about 10.4605 UPS shares per Note, exposing them to further loss, up to total loss of principal.
The Notes are unsecured senior debt of TD, not listed on any exchange, and the estimated value at pricing was $934.60 per $1,000 Note, below the public offering price. Extensive risk, liquidity and tax disclosures apply.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering Capped Buffered Notes linked to the Russell 2000 Index, maturing on May 5, 2027. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount and provides unleveraged upside exposure to the index, capped at a Maximum Redemption Amount of $1,169.50, equal to a maximum return of 16.95%.
The Notes offer a 20.00% downside buffer: investors receive full principal back if the index finish level is at or above 80.00% of the Initial Value. Below that level, losses increase 1% for each additional 1% decline, up to a maximum loss of 80.00% of principal. The Initial Value is 2,613.743 and the Buffer Value is 2,090.9944.
The public offering price is $1,000 per Note, including a $2.50 underwriting discount, for initial total proceeds of $249,375.00 to TD on a $250,000.00 issuance. The issuer’s estimated value at pricing was $994.20 per Note, reflecting internal funding and structuring costs. The Notes pay no interest, are unsecured senior debt subject to TD’s credit risk, will not be listed on any exchange, and feature complex tax and liquidity considerations highlighted in detailed risk and tax sections.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering 4,351,787 senior unsecured notes linked to the S&P 500® Index at $10.00 principal amount per unit, for a total public offering price of $43,517,870.00.
The notes are automatically callable after roughly one, two, or three years if the Index is at or above the 6,969.01 Starting Value, paying $10.896, $11.792, or $12.688 per unit, respectively. If never called and the Index finishes below the 6,969.01 Threshold Value, investors have 1-to-1 downside exposure and can lose up to all principal.
The initial estimated value is $9.746 per unit, below the $10.00 offering price, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs, including a $0.20 underwriting discount and $0.05 hedging-related charge per unit. The notes pay no periodic interest, are subject to TD’s credit risk, and are not listed, so secondary market liquidity may be limited.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Index, Russell 2000 Index and S&P 500 Index, in an initial aggregate principal amount of $881,000.
The Notes pay a monthly contingent interest at approximately 7.75% per annum only if on each observation date every index is at or above its barrier set at 75% of its initial level. TD may, at its discretion, call the Notes monthly starting with the 12th interest date, returning principal plus any due interest, after which no further payments are made.
If the Notes are not called and on the final valuation date any index is below its 70% barrier, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the worst index’s decline, and investors can lose up to their entire investment. The Notes are unsecured TD senior debt, not listed on any exchange, and had an estimated value at pricing of $934.80 per $1,000 Note, below the public offering price.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering unsecured Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500. Investors receive monthly interest at an annual rate of approximately 6.95% only when all three indexes are at or above 75% of their initial level on each observation date.
TD can redeem the notes in whole, starting on the twelfth interest payment date, paying back principal plus any due interest, after which no further amounts are owed. If the notes are not called and any index finishes below 60% of its initial value at final valuation, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the worst index’s decline, up to a full loss of principal.
The notes mature in February 2031, are not listed on any exchange, and carry TD’s senior unsecured credit risk. The public offering price is $1,000 per note; total initial offering is $107,000, with estimated value of $929.80 per note, reflecting structuring and hedging costs.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is issuing Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to three equity indexes: the Nasdaq-100® Technology Sector, the Russell 2000® Index and the S&P 500® Index. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount and matures on January 4, 2028, unless TD calls it earlier.
The Notes pay monthly contingent interest at approximately 8.90% per annum only when on each observation date all three indexes are at or above 70.00% of their initial values. TD can redeem the Notes in whole, but not in part, on monthly call dates, paying $1,000 per Note plus any due interest.
If the Notes are not called and, on the final valuation date, any index closes below 70.00% of its initial value, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the worst-performing index, potentially down to zero. The deal size is $1,752,000, and the estimated value at pricing was $946.10 per Note, below the $1,000 public offering price. Payments depend on TD’s credit, and the Notes are unsecured, unlisted and involve complex risks and tax treatment.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior unsecured Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the worst performer of the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector, Russell 2000 Index and S&P 500 Index, in $1,000 denominations with a total initial offering of $90,000.
The Notes pay contingent interest at a 10.95% per annum rate, credited monthly only if on each observation date all three indexes are at or above 70% of their Initial Values. TD can call the Notes monthly starting with the third interest payment date, returning principal plus any due interest.
If the Notes are not called and any index finishes below its 70% barrier on the final valuation date, repayment is reduced 1-for-1 with the decline of the worst-performing index, down to a possible total loss of principal. The Notes are not listed, carry TD credit risk, and had an estimated value of $964.20 per $1,000 at pricing, below the public offering price.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indexes. The Notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon at a 10.05% per annum rate only if each index stays at or above 70% of its initial level on the observation date.
TD can call the Notes quarterly from the second payment date, returning the $1,000 principal plus any due interest, after which no further payments are made. If the Notes are not called and any index finishes below 65% of its initial level at maturity, investors lose principal on a 1-for-1 basis with the worst-performing index and can lose their entire investment. The Notes are unsecured senior debt subject to TD’s credit risk, will not be listed, and were priced at $1,000 per Note with an estimated value of $982.50 and total public offering of $1,527,000.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering $1,000,000 of unsecured senior notes linked to the Nasdaq-100 Index®, in $1,000 denominations. The approximately 54-week notes can be automatically called on quarterly review dates if the index closes at or above the initial level.
Holders receive a $20.00 contingent interest payment per $1,000 when the index is at or above a barrier set at 71.10% of the initial level, with a “memory” feature that can repay previously missed coupons. If the notes are not called and the final index level is below the barrier, principal loss matches the index decline and can reach 100%.
The estimated value on the pricing date is $986.80 per $1,000 note, below the public offering price due to selling, structuring and hedging costs. The notes are not principal-protected, are subject to TD’s credit risk, will not be listed on an exchange and may trade, if at all, at a significant discount in the secondary market.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior unsecured Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices, in an aggregate principal amount of $927,000. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount and matures on February 3, 2028.
The Notes pay a contingent coupon at an annual rate of approximately 8.20%, calculated monthly, but only if on each observation date all three indices are at or above 75% of their initial values. TD may call the Notes monthly starting with the sixth interest date, returning principal plus any due interest. At maturity, if not called, investors receive full principal only if every index is at or above 70% of its initial value; otherwise repayment is reduced 1% for each 1% decline in the worst-performing index, potentially to zero.
The Notes are not listed, are subject to TD’s credit risk, and have an estimated value of $955.50 per $1,000 at pricing, below the public offering price due to selling, structuring and hedging costs. The documentation highlights complex risk, market, liquidity and tax considerations, including treatment as prepaid derivative contracts for U.S. federal income tax purposes.