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 offering senior unsecured Autocallable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of Apple, Amazon and NVIDIA common stock. Each $1,000 Note pays a contingent coupon at an annual rate of approximately 13.85% if, on monthly observation dates, all three shares close at or above 60% of their initial values.
The Notes are automatically called, and repay principal plus any due interest, if on any call observation date all three stocks are at or above 100% of their initial values. If not called, principal repayment at maturity depends on the worst performer versus a 50% barrier; if any stock finishes below 50% of its initial value, losses match the full decline of the worst stock, up to a total loss of principal. The estimated value is $924.60 per $1,000 Note, they are complex, unsecured, not listed, and pay no dividends from the underlying shares.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is issuing senior unsecured Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the worst performer of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500, with a total public offering of $119,000 and a principal amount of $1,000 per Note.
The Notes pay a contingent interest rate of 10.20% per annum, credited monthly only if all three indices stay at or above 75% of their initial values on the observation date. TD can call the Notes monthly starting on the sixth interest date, returning principal plus any due interest and ending the investment early. If the Notes are not called and any index finishes below 70% of its initial value at final valuation in February 2028, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the worst index’s decline, and investors can lose up to their entire principal. The Notes are unsecured TD obligations, are not insured, will not be listed, and had an estimated value of $973.20 per $1,000 at pricing.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is issuing Capped Contingent Absolute Return Buffered Notes linked to the S&P 500® Index, with a $1,000 principal per Note and a maximum redemption of $1,251.50 (25.15% maximum gain).
The Notes offer full participation in index gains up to the cap and a 25% downside buffer; if the index finishes between 75% and 100% of its initial level, investors receive a positive “contingent absolute” return. Below 75% of the initial level, principal losses increase 1% for each additional 1% index decline, up to a 75% loss. The Notes pay no interest, are unsecured obligations subject to TD’s credit risk, and will not be listed. The initial offering totals $1,118,000, with an estimated value of $982 per $1,000 Note.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior unsecured Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of three ETFs: iShares Russell 2000, Invesco QQQ and SPDR S&P 500.
The Notes pay a contingent interest rate of 11.25% per annum, evaluated quarterly. A payment is made only if, on each observation date, the closing value of each ETF is at least 70% of its Initial Value. If any ETF is below its barrier on that date, no interest is paid for that quarter.
TD may, at its discretion, call the Notes in whole on any quarterly payment date (other than maturity). If called, investors receive the $1,000 principal per Note plus any due interest, and the product terminates.
If the Notes are not called, principal repayment at the February 3, 2028 maturity depends on the worst ETF. If the final value of every ETF is at least 70% of its Initial Value, investors receive full principal. If any ETF finishes below 70%, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the percentage decline of the worst performer, potentially down to zero.
The Notes are subject to TD’s credit risk, will not be listed on an exchange, and may have limited liquidity. The public offering price is $1,000 per Note, with total initial offering of $1,380,000 and underwriting discount of $5 per Note. The estimated value on the pricing date was $987.20 per Note, lower than the public price, reflecting structuring and hedging costs.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering principal-at-risk callable contingent income securities linked to the worst performer of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500. Each $1,000 security can pay a quarterly coupon of $24.75 (9.90% per annum) only if, on every trading day in that quarter, all three indices stay at or above 70% of their initial levels.
If TD calls the notes early, investors receive $1,000 plus any due coupon and no further payments. If held to maturity and any index ends below 70% of its initial value, repayment is reduced 1-for-1 with the worst index’s loss and can fall to zero. The estimated initial value is between $935 and $970 per $1,000, and all payments depend on TD’s credit.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering $1,015,000 of Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector, Russell 2000 Index and S&P 500 Index. These senior unsecured notes pay a contingent coupon of approximately 9.95% per annum, but only when all three indexes are at or above 75% of their initial levels on monthly observation dates.
TD can redeem the notes monthly starting with the sixth interest date, returning principal plus any due interest. If the notes are not called and any index finishes below 60% of its initial level at maturity in November 2030, investors lose principal in line with the worst index and can lose the entire $1,000 per note. The notes are not listed, carry TD’s credit risk, and their initial estimated value is $950.80 per $1,000, 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, in a $699,000 issuance priced at $1,000 per Note. The Notes pay an annual contingent interest rate of approximately 11.45%, but only if all three indexes stay at or above 70.00% of their initial values on monthly observation dates.
TD can redeem the Notes early, in whole only, on monthly call dates starting with the third interest payment, returning principal plus any due interest. If the Notes are not called and any index finishes below its 70% barrier, investors lose principal in line with the worst-performing index, up to a total loss. The Notes are unsecured TD obligations, are not insured, will not be listed on an exchange, and the initial estimated value of $989.60 per Note is below the $1,000 public offering price.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering U.S. dollar-denominated Step Down Autocallable Barrier Notes linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average®, Russell 2000® Index and S&P 500® Index. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount and may be automatically called on scheduled observation dates.
The Notes pay a fixed Call Premium if, on a Call Observation Date, the closing value of each index is at or above its Call Threshold Value, starting at a Call Price of $1,089 per Note in February 2027 and rising to $1,267 at the Final Valuation Date, based on an 8.90% per annum Call Rate. On the Final Valuation Date, the Call Threshold Value steps down to each index’s Barrier Value, set at 60.00% of its Initial Value.
If the Notes are not called and the Final Value of any index is below its Barrier Value, investors receive $1,000 plus $1,000 times the Least Performing Percentage Change and can lose up to their entire principal. The Notes pay no interest, are unsecured senior debt of TD, will not be listed, and all payments are subject to TD’s credit risk. The estimated value on the pricing date is between $950.00 and $985.00 per Note, below the public offering price of $1,000.00.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior unsecured notes linked to the Nasdaq-100 Index® with a principal amount of $1,000 per Note and a term of about 54 weeks, subject to automatic call. Investors may receive contingent interest payments of $20.00 per $1,000 Note on scheduled payment dates if the index closes at or above a barrier level of 18,403.7302, which is 71.10% of the initial level of 25,884.29.
If the Notes are not called and the final index level is below the barrier, repayment of principal is reduced 1% for each 1% decline from the initial level, down to a possible total loss. The Notes are not listed, are subject to TD’s credit risk, and have an estimated value on the pricing date between $955.00 and $990.00 per $1,000, less than the public offering price.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior unsecured Step Down Autocallable Barrier Notes linked to the worst performer of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Russell 2000 Index and S&P 500 Index, each with a $1,000 principal amount.
The notes can be automatically called on scheduled observation dates if all three indices are at or above their call threshold, paying back principal plus a call premium based on a 10.45% per annum rate, up to a maximum call price of $1,313.50 at final maturity. If the notes are never called and any index finishes below its 70% barrier on the final valuation date, investors lose 1% of principal for each 1% decline in the worst-performing index and could lose the entire principal.
The notes pay no periodic interest, are subject to TD’s credit risk, will not be listed on an exchange, and have an estimated value on the pricing date between $950.00 and $985.00 per note, below the public offering price of $1,000.00.