Company: TDBCP
Filing Date: 2025-02-26
Form Type: 424B5
Source: 0001193125-25-036947
Chunk: 112

Company: TORONTO DOMINION BANK
Filing Date: 2025-02-26
Form: 424B5
Chunk 112
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 prospectus supplement, each debt security will generally be represented by one or more global securities representing the entire issuance of securities. We will issue debt securities

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evidenced by certificates in definitive form to a particular investor only in limited circumstances. Both certificated securities in definitive form and global securities will be issued in
registered form, where our obligation runs to the holder of the security named on the face of the security. Definitive securities name you or your nominee as the owner of the security, and in order to transfer or exchange these securities or to
receive payments other than interest or other interim payments, you or your nominee must physically deliver the securities to the trustee, registrar, paying agent or other agent, as applicable. Global securities name a depository or its nominee as
the owner of the debt securities. The depositary maintains a computerized system that will reflect each investor’s beneficial ownership of the securities through an account maintained by the investor with its broker/dealer, bank, trust company
or other representative. See “Ownership, Book-Entry Procedures and Settlement.”

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CANADIAN BANK RESOLUTION POWERS General Under Canadian bank resolution powers, the CDIC may, in circumstances where TD has ceased, or is about to cease, to be viable, assume temporary control or ownership of TD and may be granted broad powers by one or more Orders of the Governor in Council (Canada), including the power to sell or dispose of all or a part of the assets of TD, and the power to carry out or cause TD to carry out a transaction or a series of transactions, the purpose of which is to restructure the business of TD. As part of the Canadian bank resolution powers, certain provisions of, and regulations under the Bank Act, the CDIC Act and certain other Canadian federal statutes pertaining to banks, which we refer to collectively as the “bail-inregime,” provide for a bank recapitalization regime for banks designated by the Superintendent as D-SIBs,which include TD. The expressed objectives of the bail-inregime include reducing government and taxpayer exposure in the unlikely event of a failure of a D-SIB,reducing the likelihood of such a failure by increasing market discipline and reinforcing that bank shareholders and creditors are responsible for the D-SIBs’risks and not taxpayers, and preserving financial stability by empowering the CDIC to quickly restore a failed D-SIBto viability and allow it to remain open and operating, even where the D-SIBhas experienced severe losses. Under the CDIC Act