Glory

Glory is all about how you feel doing your job. We'd love to say that you'll feel glorious every time you approve a loan that saves a business, but it probably won't be the case. No, we're not saying that because we think you're heartless or enjoy reveling in others' pain; we say it because credit analysts reign in their personal feelings about their decisions in order to do their job well.

If you felt amazing giving Granny Putzby an extension loan on her house, then you'd probably feel miserable in the alternate universe where she didn't qualify. And if you were rooting one way or another, it likely affected your final decision. That's no good for someone whose job it is to make an impartial calculation.

 
That space-out time should be reserved for considering fro-yo flavors. (Source)

For a credit analyst, it's all just dollar signs and numbers. If you get too caught up feeling glorious about the decisions you make that work out well, you'll probably also get too caught up in the ones that don't turn out so well. And you don't want to end up staring into space all day, contemplating the what-ifs of the rough and tumble world of credit analysis. There are numbers to be crunched.