A credit grantor is any individual or business that extends credit to customers. The credit can be for other businesses or consumers and can come in many forms, such as closed-end loans (like auto loans, mortgages, and student loans), revolving loans (like credit cards or certain home equity loans), or a hybrid of the two. Some credit is backed by property or assets. In the U.S., the primary credit grantors are large commercial banks and credit unions. But credit is also extended by small businesses, governments, and other organizations.

See all Topics

Q3 Ends with Moderating Consumer Sentiment, but Confidence Hit by October Plunge

30 October 2008

The Cost of Dirty Data to Accounts Receivable Managers

30 October 2008

Fed Cuts Interest Rates to 1 Percent

30 October 2008

ABA Testifies on Need to Maintain Credit Availability for Small Businesses

30 October 2008

PIC Solutions Launches Enhanced CollectSmart 4.0

29 October 2008

Banks Line Up for Government Money

28 October 2008

Electronic Payment Growing, But Consumers Slow to Catch On

28 October 2008

Regional Bank 1st Capital Shows Loan Growth

24 October 2008

FTC Will Delay Enforcement of 'Red Flags' Rule to May 1

24 October 2008

Triad Financial Enters Third-party Servicing Business

24 October 2008

Wachovia Reports $24 billion Loss in Third Quarter

22 October 2008

Caine & Weiner Reacts to Global Credit Crunch with 10-Day Remittance

22 October 2008

Asset Recovery Leader Enable Holdings Secures $2 Million Bridge Loan

22 October 2008

Second Economic Stimulus Plan Gets Bernanke Blessing

21 October 2008

PIC Solutions Celebrates its 10th Year of Industry Leadership

21 October 2008

Consumer Banks to Focus on Credit Risk in 2009: Analyst

20 October 2008

Credit Card Sector Faces Challenging Period Ahead: Moody's

20 October 2008

ING Gets $13.3 billion Capital Boost From Dutch Government

20 October 2008

Swiss Government Props Up UBS with $60 billion

17 October 2008

Citigroup Reports Loss of $2.8 billion, Card Losses Soar

16 October 2008