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Investor Presentaiton

Canadian Bail-in Regime - Comparison to Other Jurisdictions Bail-in implementation in other jurisdictions has increased the riskiness of bail-inable bonds vs. non-bail-inable bonds: Legislative changes prohibit bail-outs, increasing the probability that bail-in will be relied on The hierarchy of claims places bail-in debt below deposits and senior debt through structural subordination, legislation or contractual means Bail-in is expected to rely on write-down of securities, imposing certain losses on investors The Canadian framework differs from other jurisdictions on several points: • The Canadian government has not introduced legislation preventing bail-outs Canadian senior term debt will be issued in a single class and will not be subordinated to another class of senior term debt like other jurisdictions such as the US and Europe Canada does not have a depositor preference regime; bail-in debt does not rank lower than other liabilities No Creditor Worse Off principle provides that no creditor shall incur greater losses than under insolvency proceedings • There are no write-down provisions in the framework Conversion formula under many scenarios may result in investor gains 1 As referenced in the Bank Recapitalization (Bail-in) Regulations: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-2018-57/FullText.html CIBC 2 Decreased to 22.50% on March 13, 2020 upon decrease of Domestic Stability Buffer to 1.00% (buffer will not increase for at least 18 months; this was re-confirmed by OSFI on December 8, 2020) CIBC Fixed Income Investor Presentation | 31
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