Welcome to our dedicated page for Toronto Dominion BK Ont SEC filings (Ticker: TDOMF), 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 SEC filings page for TORONTO DOM BK SER 9 PFD (TDOMF) provides access to U.S. regulatory reports filed by The Toronto-Dominion Bank as a foreign private issuer. The bank submits Form 6-K current reports under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and indicates that it files on Form 40-F for its broader reporting obligations.
In these Form 6-K filings, The Toronto-Dominion Bank includes exhibits such as underwriting agreements, indentures and supplemental indentures, legal opinions from U.S. and Canadian counsel, earnings coverage documents, earnings news releases, dividend news releases, notices of meeting and record date, CEO and CFO certificates, and independent auditor's reports. Several filings state that, except for certain exhibits, the Form 6-K is incorporated by reference into all outstanding registration statements of the bank filed with the SEC.
For TDOMF specifically, a key filing is the Form 6-K dated September 22, 2025, whose exhibit index lists a press release titled "TD Bank Announces Redemption of Non-Cumulative 5-Year Rate Reset Class A First Preferred Shares, Series 9 (NVCC)." Another Form 6-K on the same date references a Material Change Report. These documents are central for understanding the redemption of the Series 9 preferred shares associated with TDOMF.
On Stock Titan, users can review these filings in one place and use AI-powered summaries to interpret the contents of Form 6-K exhibits, such as redemption announcements, earnings-related documents, and legal agreements. Real-time updates from EDGAR help ensure that new Form 6-K reports, opinions of counsel, and other exhibits from The Toronto-Dominion Bank become available as they are filed, giving investors a structured view of the regulatory record behind securities like TDOMF.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank filed a Form 6-K for September 2025 that mainly serves as a cover for several transaction-related exhibits. These include an underwriting agreement dated September 12, 2025 between the Bank and TD Securities (USA) LLC, and a base indenture dated September 15, 2016 with Computershare Trust Company entities.
The filing also includes a Fifth Supplemental Indenture dated September 23, 2025, as well as U.S. and Canadian legal opinions and related consents from Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP and McCarthy Tétrault LLP. The Form 6-K is incorporated by reference into all of the Bank’s outstanding U.S. registration statements.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank filed a Form 6-K as a foreign private issuer and incorporated this report by reference into all of its outstanding U.S. registration statements. The filing primarily furnishes an exhibit containing a press release dated September 22, 2025, in which TD Bank announces the redemption of its Non-Cumulative 5-Year Rate Reset Class A First Preferred Shares, Series 9 (NVCC). The document is signed on behalf of the bank by Sue-Anne Fox, Associate Vice President, Legal, Treasury and Corporate Securities.
Prospectus supplement for TD (symbol: TDOMF) describes an offering of Non-Viability Contingent Capital (NVCC) notes (the "Notes") maturing October 31, 2085, with quarterly interest payments beginning January 31, 2026 and a fixed interest rate until October 31, 2030, followed by five-year resets linked to a U.S. Treasury Rate plus a spread. The Notes are supported by Corresponding Limited Recourse Trust Assets initially consisting of Non-Cumulative Fixed Rate Reset Preferred Shares, Series 33 (the "Series 33 Shares"), issued to a Limited Recourse Trustee. If a Recourse Event or Failed Coupon Payment occurs, Noteholders’ sole remedy is delivery of their proportionate share of the Trust Assets, which extinguishes claims against the Bank. The Notes are deeply subordinated in normal wind-up and are subject to NVCC, bail-in conversion and Canadian regulatory restrictions, tax and withholding considerations, and liquidity and market risks for any resulting shares.