Company: TDBCP
Filing Date: 2025-02-05
Form Type: 424B2
Source: 0001140361-25-003162
Chunk: 19

Company: TORONTO DOMINION BANK
Filing Date: 2025-02-05
Form: 424B2
Chunk 19
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 accuracy or completeness of the information obtained from Bloomberg. The historical performance of each Reference Asset should not be taken as an indication of its future performance, and no assurance can be given as to the Final Value of any Reference Asset. We cannot give you any assurance that the performance of the Reference Assets will result in any positive return on your initial investment.

| Dow Jones Industrial Average® |

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ®(“INDU”) is a benchmark of performance for companies in the U.S. stock market by measuring the price-weighted average of 30 “blue-chip” U.S. stocks in all industries, with the exception of those in the transportation and utilities industry. The number of stocks in INDU was 12 in 1896, rose to 20 in 1916, then to 30 in 1928, and has been at that level ever since. INDU is calculated in U.S. dollars as well as Japanese yen. While there are no quantitative rules for component selection, a stock typically is added only if it has an excellent reputation, demonstrates sustained growth, is of interest to a large number of investors. Maintaining adequate sector representation within INDU is also a consideration in the selection process. Companies should be incorporated and headquartered in the U.S., with a plurality of revenues derived from the U.S. INDU is maintained by an Averages Committee comprised of three representatives of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and two representatives of The Wall Street Journal (“WSJ”). The Averages Committee was created in March 2010, when Dow Jones Indexes became part of CME Group Index Services, LLC, a joint venture company owned by CME Group Inc. and by Dow Jones & Company, Inc. In July 2012, The McGraw-Hill Companies, now S&P Global Inc., and CME Group Inc. launched S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (the “Index Sponsor”). Changes to INDU are made on an as-needed basis. There is no annual or semi-annual reconstitution. Rather, changes in response to corporate actions and market developments can be made at any time. INDU is price weighted rather than market capitalization weighted. Therefore, the component stock weightings are affected only by changes in the stocks’ prices, in contrast with the weightings of other indices that are affected by both price changes and changes in the number of shares outstanding. The value of INDU is the sum of the primary exchange prices of each of the 30 common stocks included in INDU, divided by a