U.S. tax classification for certain pooled investment vehicles that pass income through to shareholders if they meet distribution and qualification rules.
A regulated investment company (RIC) is a U.S. tax classification for certain pooled investment vehicles that pass income through to shareholders if they meet distribution and qualification rules.
It matters because many familiar fund products are not only investment vehicles. They are also tax structures, and the tax treatment changes how returns reach investors.
A RIC generally matters for:
The term matters because investors often focus on fund strategy but ignore the tax wrapper. In practice, the wrapper can strongly affect after-tax outcomes and distribution behavior.