HR3383-119

Passed House

To amend the Investment Company Act of 1940 with respect to the authority of closed-end companies to invest in private funds.

119th Congress Introduced May 14, 2025

At a Glance

Read full bill text

Legislative Progress

Passed House
Introduced Committee Passed
Dec 15, 2025

Received; read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, …

Dec 15, 2025 (inferred)

Passed House (inferred from eh version)

Jun 25, 2025

Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the …

May 14, 2025

Mrs. Wagner (for herself, Mr. Meeks, Mr. Torres of New …

House Roll #328

On Passage

Increasing Investor Opportunities Act

Passed
302 Yea 123 Nay 8 Not Voting
Dec 11, 2025
House Roll #327

On Agreeing to the Amendment

Failed
214 Yea 215 Nay 9 Not Voting
Dec 11, 2025
House Roll #326

On Agreeing to the Amendment

Failed
211 Yea 219 Nay 8 Not Voting
Dec 11, 2025
House Roll #325

On Agreeing to the Amendment

Failed
54 Yea 374 Nay 11 Not Voting
Dec 11, 2025

Summary

What This Bill Does

This bill removes regulatory barriers that prevent publicly traded closed-end investment companies from investing in private funds like hedge funds and private equity. Currently, the SEC can restrict these investments; this bill prohibits such restrictions and also prevents stock exchanges from refusing to list these companies.

Who Benefits and How

Asset managers and private fund sponsors benefit enormously as this opens a massive new pool of retail investor capital to private funds that were previously limited to wealthy accredited investors. Closed-end fund companies gain flexibility to offer new products that invest in hedge funds and private equity. Investment banks and exchanges benefit from new listing fees and trading commissions.

Who Bears the Burden and How

Retail investors face increased exposure to risky, illiquid, and opaque private fund investments that were historically restricted to sophisticated investors who can bear losses. The SEC loses authority to protect ordinary investors from complex private fund structures. Consumer protection advocates lose a key regulatory safeguard.

Key Provisions

  • Prohibits SEC from restricting closed-end companies from investing in private funds
  • Prohibits SEC from limiting the sale or listing of such closed-end company securities
  • Extends these rules to business development companies (BDCs)
  • Prohibits stock exchanges from refusing to list these funds
Model: claude-opus-4
Generated: Jan 16, 2026 17:58

Evidence Chain:

This summary is derived from the structured analysis below. See "Detailed Analysis" for per-title beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

Primary Purpose

Allows closed-end investment companies and business development companies to freely invest in private funds (hedge funds, private equity, venture capital) without SEC restrictions, and allows exchanges to list such companies.

Policy Domains

Financial Services Securities Regulation Investment Management

Legislative Strategy

"Deregulate private fund access to enable retail investor participation through publicly traded closed-end fund wrappers"

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Securities Regulation Investment Management
Actor Mappings
"the_commission"
→ Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

Key Definitions

Terms defined in this bill

2 terms
"private fund" §2

Has the meaning given in section 202(a) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 - generally means a fund that would be an investment company but for sections 3(c)(1) or 3(c)(7) exemptions (i.e., hedge funds, private equity, venture capital)

"closed-end company" §2_closed_end

As defined in section 5(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, includes business development companies under section 54

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology