- Joined
- 7/15/25
- Messages
- 7
- Points
- 1
Hello everyone,
recently I didn't even pass a screening process in one of big hedge funds for quant trading intern role.
I tried to contact an HR to understand why they didn't proceed with my application. The person was very kind and I got the following reply:
"I can provide you with some further feedback! This is a very competitive environment and at this moment we have many qualified candidates in the pipeline. Our selection criteria include education, experience, extracurricular activities and motivation.
Typically, the background of a quant in a firm like ours involves a bachelor and/or master in STEM studies such as maths, physics, engineering or econometrics. Furthermore, the ideal CV will show that the candidate has engaged in a bit of trading (either with real account or a demo account) or has created their own trading bot/back tested their own trading strategies. Candidates who have done personal projects, joined study societies or followed business courses related to trading, stand out above others.
Finally, seeing a strong cover letter, IMO, IPhO, chess, poker, competitive sports or musical instruments at a high level is a big plus. The choice is always difficult."
The first thing that blows my eyes, is that they really looking for people who do math olympiads, playing music instruments professionaly or whatever. Alright, fine.. This can be one of the criteria for fitering, why not...
The other part, except this, I tick all the boxes:
1. I have my bachelor in math in highly ranked university and will start my masters in financial engineering there as well.
2. I did my bachelor thesis on pricing of European and American options
2. I engaged in trading. I manage actively a pair trading strategy that has a quite decent pnl and I report it daily on my github page. I noted it in my CV
3. I worked on a lot of personal projects related to deep learning, machine learning, natural language processing and finance. Some of them I also reported on my CV and are available on my github page.
4. I took part of 2 associations in my university. One of them is finance association where we communicate very closely with financial companies and work on trading strategies.
5. I also have a few internships in financial industry. One of them where I worked as analyst and another as software engineer for the AI platform.
6. Was teaching assistant for 7 advanced courses during my bachelor studies
Can someone, for me stupid guy, explain what I did wrong and how to pass even screening process which is not even step 0, its step -1000 before even starting the process. Probably should think to reorientate?
Feel free to write any feedback or your experience in comments.
Have a nice day.
recently I didn't even pass a screening process in one of big hedge funds for quant trading intern role.
I tried to contact an HR to understand why they didn't proceed with my application. The person was very kind and I got the following reply:
"I can provide you with some further feedback! This is a very competitive environment and at this moment we have many qualified candidates in the pipeline. Our selection criteria include education, experience, extracurricular activities and motivation.
Typically, the background of a quant in a firm like ours involves a bachelor and/or master in STEM studies such as maths, physics, engineering or econometrics. Furthermore, the ideal CV will show that the candidate has engaged in a bit of trading (either with real account or a demo account) or has created their own trading bot/back tested their own trading strategies. Candidates who have done personal projects, joined study societies or followed business courses related to trading, stand out above others.
Finally, seeing a strong cover letter, IMO, IPhO, chess, poker, competitive sports or musical instruments at a high level is a big plus. The choice is always difficult."
The first thing that blows my eyes, is that they really looking for people who do math olympiads, playing music instruments professionaly or whatever. Alright, fine.. This can be one of the criteria for fitering, why not...
The other part, except this, I tick all the boxes:
1. I have my bachelor in math in highly ranked university and will start my masters in financial engineering there as well.
2. I did my bachelor thesis on pricing of European and American options
2. I engaged in trading. I manage actively a pair trading strategy that has a quite decent pnl and I report it daily on my github page. I noted it in my CV
3. I worked on a lot of personal projects related to deep learning, machine learning, natural language processing and finance. Some of them I also reported on my CV and are available on my github page.
4. I took part of 2 associations in my university. One of them is finance association where we communicate very closely with financial companies and work on trading strategies.
5. I also have a few internships in financial industry. One of them where I worked as analyst and another as software engineer for the AI platform.
6. Was teaching assistant for 7 advanced courses during my bachelor studies
Can someone, for me stupid guy, explain what I did wrong and how to pass even screening process which is not even step 0, its step -1000 before even starting the process. Probably should think to reorientate?
Feel free to write any feedback or your experience in comments.
Have a nice day.
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