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What does it take to get hired by Goldman’s hot ‘strats’ group?

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If you’re someone with a mathematical bent, for whom ‘challenging’ maths questions are elementary and differential equations are fun, there is – allegedly – one place where you’ll feel especially fulfilled in banking: Goldman Sachs’ ‘strats’ Group. All banks have mathematical wizards, but the warlocks in Goldman’s strats team are reportedly higher paid, happier, and more empowered than those elsewhere.

“The strats team here is broader in scope than quant teams at other banks,” one strats vice president at Goldman in London tells us, speaking off the record as he is not authorised to talk to the press. “As well as quants, we have quant developers, technologists, structurers and salespeople.” Goldman’s strats team is at the forefront of the firm’s algorithmic and electronic trading business, he adds – making it key to the future of the firm.

Goldman itself describes its strats team as a, ‘a world leader in developing quantitative and technological techniques to solve complex business problems.’ Members of the team are divided into three groups: ‘desk strats’ who sit with traders and develop derivative pricing models and trading algorithms, ‘sales strats’ who support the sales team with quantitative research for client questions, and ‘core strats’ who work on the firm’s technology architecture using Goldman’s own proprietary coding language, ‘Slang.’ As we reported last week, Goldman’s already powerful strats group is said to be gaining influence internally now that the new CIO, Marty Chavez (a former strat himself) manages both strats and technology for the firm. The former CIO, Steve Scopellite, merely had technology in his purview.[prbreak][/prbreak]

One London-based recruiter who hires for Goldman’s strats group says members of the strats team get paid far more than technologists and quants at other firms. “I’ve seen top programmers with excellent understanding of specific derivatives receiving offers of £350k,” he claims.”Goldman strats get ridiculous amounts of money compared to most tech people.”

Goldman was unable to comment within the time frame of this article, but doesn’t typically discuss pay anyway. What does seem certain, however, is that positions in Goldman’s strats team – however sought after – aren’t always easy to fill. Strats jobs are often advertised for months on the firm’s own website. For example, Goldman has been advertising for an associate-level member of its IBD strats team since January 2014 and for a member of its fixed income and commodities strats team since March.

“Goldman is extremely fussy about it hires into the strats group,” says the head of the technology practice at one search firm, speaking anonymously as Goldman is a client. This fussiness is combined with a need to keep feeding the beast.”Goldman has a rolling requirement for recruiting a lot of people into strats,” says another quantitative finance recruiter, speaking equally anonymously. “It’s a huge area of their business – about eight times the size of other banks’ quant groups,” he adds.

Needless to say, members of Goldman’s strats team need to be talented mathematicians. According to Goldman’s own recruiters, they also need to be have, ‘an ability to code and to pick up a new coding language.’ “90% of the desk strats in London have a PhD in maths from places like Imperial, the London School of Economics and Cambridge,” claims one recruiter. Among Goldman’s core strats, a first class degree in computer science from a top university is said to be more common – along with expertise in everything from C++ to C#, Cocoa (Touch), Objective C and Java.

Interviews, interviews and interviews
As with all roles at Goldman Sachs, getting a job in the strats team involves multiple interviews. Anecdotally, however, strats roles involve even more interviews than most.

Recruiters say the process starts with a telephone interview. This can last anything from 45 minutes to an hour and a half. If the initial telephone interview goes well, it will be followed by loads of other interviews – some of which may also be conducted via phone. “They might want you to meet anything from 15 to 20 people,” says another London quant recruiter, speaking off the record as he works with Goldman. “The reporting lines within the strats team can be blurred, so there are a lot of people who will want to sign the hire off,” he adds.

Strats interview questions
Strats interviews at Goldman Sachs are notorious for including challenging interview questions. “They will go through you CV and test you on everything you claim to know about,” says one of the quant recruiters we spoke to. Stochastic calculus, partial differential equations, Monte Carlo Simulations and questions involving sorting algorithms are all common. The initial telephone interview is likely to cover the basics of computer science, along with questions on multithreaded programming and deadlock issues, he adds.

Goldman strats interviews are also famous for their brainteasers. Previous questions, listed here, have reportedly included those below. If you want a strats role at Goldman Sachs, you’ll need to leap a lot of hurdles.

-There’s a horse race with 25 horses and 5 lanes. What’s the minimum number of races you need to find the fastest three horses?

-There are 100 prisoners in a cell and you are the warden and you have one bullet. How can you prevent all of them from escaping?

-You toss a fair coin 400 times. What’s the probability that you get at least 220 heads? Round your answer to the nearest per cent.

-We are at a junction. P is the probability that at least one car will pass in the next 20 minutes. What’s the probability that no car will pass in the next five minutes?

-10 people of different ages sit around a table. What’s the probability that they sit in an age-ascending order?

-A two year bond yields 6%. A one year bond yields 4%. What’s the implied rate for a bond that starts one year from now?

Source http://news.efinancialcareers.com/uk-en/174674/take-get-hired-goldmans-hot-strats-group

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Rise of the quants at Goldman Sachs
 
Who wrote this? I highly doubt Goldman are searching for people with experience in Cocoa (Touch) and Objective C.
 
Yeh, I bet they love Javascript programmers for quant roles.
 
The only thing I find a bit strange is the salary. Isn't £350k too high even for a top programmer? How would it compare to a US one? I thought London had lower salaries on average.
 
The only thing I find a bit strange is the salary. Isn't £350k too high even for a top programmer? How would it compare to a US one? I thought London had lower salaries on average.

First question: No, 350k is not too high for a top programmer. however I do not think a recent grad can get paid that much. That figure is probabaly for experienced pro.

Second question: No, london has high salaries on average in terms of the Capital Market. but the job makrket is very competitive becuz of the shitty economy in Europe.
 
What are some similar groups in the industry at other firms? JPMC has an ECS group (Electronic Client Solutions), and I think they do similar things. Does anyone know?
 
They hate them, that is why they post job offers for them on their website.
This crap reminds me of the sort of stuff I see on low grade shows on "London Live" or "The One Show" where they'll interview someone who used to work for KPMG or one of the big IBs - it's funny how if you listen to what they say it's so obvious that it's either promotional and/or they're being careful not to bad mouth organisations they probably left for a reason. Not only is there no talk of working in these "big" organisations being stressful (and in some cases career ending) but in some cases no talk of types of roles (I suppose the original posting is an exception), how many companies and doors you'll knock on before you get a job or any reference to reality or advice for graduates at all.
 
The only thing I find a bit strange is the salary. Isn't £350k too high even for a top programmer? How would it compare to a US one? I thought London had lower salaries on average.

350,000 sounds about right. Most likely speaking in terms of total compensation (salary, bonus and stock options)
 
Interview process is extremely rigorous
Im interested in applying for this after my MSc course. Could you give some more info on the proccess? Are you currently on this programme? Thanks
 
I declined an offer. My process was one round on campus, superday in jersey city with multiple groups, superday in NY was a group that liked me from the superday, final superday with another group that liked my resume and eventually made me an offer. Superdays were 4-6 hrs typically with around 6 interviews. All questions were technical ranging from exotic derivatives, finance, and stochastic calculus to brain teasers, combinatorics, stochastic processes as well as pure mathematics.
 
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