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 Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Russell 2000® Index, S&P 500® Index and the State Street® Industrial Select Sector SPDR® ETF. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount, with a term to February 14, 2029.
The Notes pay a monthly Contingent Interest Payment at an annual rate of approximately 8.20% only if, on the relevant observation date, the closing value of each reference asset is at or above its Contingent Interest Barrier, set at 70% of its Initial Value. TD may, at its discretion, call the Notes in whole (but not in part) on monthly call dates starting from the twelfth interest payment date, repaying principal plus any due interest.
If the Notes are not called, repayment at maturity depends on the final value of each reference asset versus its Barrier Value, set at 60% of its Initial Value. If any final value is below its Barrier Value, investors lose 1% of principal for each 1% decline in the least performing asset, up to a total loss of the $1,000 principal. The Notes are unsecured obligations of TD, not insured by any government agency, will not be listed on an exchange, and have an estimated initial value between $940 and $975 per $1,000 Note. U.S. tax disclosure indicates TD and investors agree to treat the Notes as prepaid derivative contracts, though alternative tax characterizations are possible.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank reports that it expects approximately $7 million in catastrophe insurance claims, after reinsurance and before tax, to be recorded in its Wealth Management & Insurance segment for the first quarter of fiscal 2026.
These catastrophe claims arise from single events in the quarter where total claims exceed the Bank’s internal threshold of $5 million before reinsurance, and are recorded in Insurance service expenses with related reinsurance impacts in Other income (loss). TD, which had $2.1 trillion in assets as of October 31, 2025, plans to release its first quarter 2026 financial results and host an earnings call on February 26, 2026.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering Autocallable Fixed Interest Barrier Notes linked to GE, LMT, NOC and RTX with a principal of $1,000 per Note. The Notes pay fixed monthly interest at an annual rate of approximately 8.00%, regardless of stock performance, unless they are automatically called.
The Notes can be called monthly starting in August 2026 if each stock is at or above 100% of its initial value, returning principal plus the due interest. If never called, principal repayment in 2028 depends on the worst-performing stock versus a 50.00% barrier of its initial value; if that stock ends below its barrier, repayment is reduced one-for-one with its decline and investors can lose their entire principal.
The Notes are unsecured senior debt of TD, not insured by U.S. or Canadian deposit insurers, will not be listed on an exchange, and have an estimated value on the pricing date expected between $895.00 and $930.00 per $1,000 Note, below the public offering price.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering unsecured callable contingent interest barrier notes linked to Salesforce and Uber common stock. Investors receive monthly contingent interest at approximately 19.40% per annum only when both stocks close at or above 60% of their initial values on observation dates.
TD can call the notes monthly starting with the third interest payment date, returning the $1,000 principal per note plus any due interest, after which no further payments are made. If the notes are not called and, at maturity in February 2028, any stock finishes below its 60% barrier, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the worst stock’s decline and can fall to zero.
The notes are not listed, have limited liquidity, and embed issuer credit risk. The estimated value on the pricing date is expected to be $935–$970 per $1,000 note, below the public offering price, reflecting structuring, distribution, and hedging costs.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq-100 and Russell 2000. The Notes pay a contingent interest rate of 10.50% per annum, but only for periods when the closing value of each index is at or above 70% of its Initial Value on the relevant observation date.
TD may, at its discretion, call the Notes quarterly starting on the third interest payment date, returning the $1,000 principal per Note plus any due interest, after which no further payments are owed. If the Notes are not called and, on the final valuation date, any index closes below 70% of its Initial Value, investors lose 1% of principal for each 1% decline in the worst-performing index and could lose their entire investment.
The Notes are unsecured obligations of TD, will not be listed, and have an estimated value at pricing between $940 and $975 per $1,000 Note. They are treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as prepaid derivative contracts under the issuer’s intended approach, with complex and uncertain tax consequences.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior unsecured Callable Contingent Income Securities linked to the worst performing of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices. The notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon of $21.625 per $1,000 (8.65% per annum) only if each index stays at or above 65% of its initial value on every trading day in the observation period.
TD may redeem the notes early on specified dates at par plus any due coupon, regardless of index performance. If held to maturity and any index finishes below 65% of its initial value, repayment is reduced 1-to-1 with the worst index decline and can fall to zero, so principal is fully at risk. The securities are unsecured obligations subject to TD’s credit risk and will not be listed on any exchange.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering unsecured senior notes linked to three U.S. equity ETFs: iShares Russell 2000 ETF, Invesco QQQ Trust and SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust. The total offering shown is $500,000, at $1,000 principal per Note.
The Notes run about 54 weeks and may be automatically called quarterly if each ETF closes at or above its initial price, returning principal plus a contingent interest payment of $25.30 per $1,000, with missed coupons potentially paid later under a “memory” feature. If not called, investors get principal back at maturity only if each final ETF price is at least 70% of its initial level; otherwise repayment is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the worst-performing ETF, and principal can be wiped out.
The estimated value on the pricing date is $984.60 per Note, below the $1,000 offering price, and the Notes will not be listed on any exchange. Payments depend entirely on TD’s credit, and the document highlights significant risks around equity volatility, ETF tracking, liquidity, conflicts of interest and complex U.S. and Canadian tax treatment, including possible 30% U.S. withholding on contingent interest for certain non-U.S. holders.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior unsecured Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to Micron Technology, Inc. common stock. Each Note has a $1,000 principal amount, with a total initial offering of $620,000.
The Notes pay a contingent interest at approximately 27.20% per annum, calculated and paid monthly only if, on each observation date, Micron’s closing price is at or above the Contingent Interest Barrier of $227.64 (60% of the $379.40 Initial Value). TD may call the Notes monthly starting on the sixth interest payment date, returning principal plus any due interest.
If the Notes are not called, repayment at maturity depends on Micron’s closing price on the Final Valuation Date relative to the Barrier Value of $189.70 (50% of the Initial Value. If the Final Value is at or above the Barrier, investors receive full principal (plus any due interest). If it is below, repayment is reduced 1% for each 1% Micron has fallen from the Initial Value, up to a total loss of principal. The Notes are unsecured obligations of TD, are not insured, and will not be listed. The estimated value on the pricing date is $946.60 per Note, less than the public offering price of $1,000.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering unsecured Senior Debt Securities, Series H, in the form of Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the Nasdaq-100® Technology Sector, Russell 2000® Index and S&P 500® Index. The Notes target a Contingent Interest Rate of approximately 12.65% per annum, paid monthly only if on each observation date all three indices are at or above 70% of their Initial Values.
TD may, at its discretion, call the Notes monthly starting on the third interest payment date, returning the $1,000 principal per Note plus any due interest, after which no further payments occur. If the Notes are not called and on the final valuation date any index is below its 70% Barrier Value, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the worst-performing index’s decline, up to a 100% loss of principal.
The Notes are not insured, will not be listed, and all payments depend on TD’s credit. The estimated initial value on the pricing date is expected between $935 and $970 per $1,000 Note. For U.S. tax purposes, TD and investors agree to treat the Notes as prepaid derivative contracts, with contingent interest generally taxed as ordinary income.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering unsecured senior Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the worst performer of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 Indices. The Notes pay contingent interest at approximately 10.75% per annum, but only for months when each index closes at or above 70% of its initial level.
TD can call the Notes quarterly starting with the third interest date, returning the $1,000 principal per Note plus any due interest, after which no further payments occur. If the Notes are not called and any index finishes below its 70% barrier at maturity, investors lose principal on a 1:1 basis with the worst index and can lose their entire investment.
The Notes are not listed, have limited or no liquidity, and their estimated initial value is between $945 and $980 per $1,000. Payments depend on TD’s credit, and the U.S. tax treatment is complex and uncertain, with TD and investors agreeing to treat the Notes as prepaid derivative contracts for tax purposes.