liquid capital

jackthelad

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Hey all,

I have a trainee trader interview with liquid capital soon, they didn’t disclose much about the interview stage, just stated that u cant really prepare for it :confused: . Anyone know what it comprises of? Anyone had an interview for a graduate role with them in the past?

Any info will be much appreciated

Many thanks
 
I have a trainee trader interview with Liquid Capital coming on next week.Did you have yours?How did it go?Any tip?It's the first stage 20 minustes numerical test.

Any info will be much appreciated.
Many Thanks
 
I have one coming up too- numerical testing round one. The email sent was very very vague- I have no idea what I'm letting myself in for- let's hope I'll be pleasantly surprised!
 
There will be no interview after the test at all.20 mmins for 35 maths logic questions,simple currency conversions,graphs and percentages.You will need a calculator.you will deal with decimal points and big figures in some instances.The key is speed and accuracy.You will have a chance to ask general questions after the test but nothing personalised.Good luck!
 
I understand some of the testing was today, has anyone got an example questions? Also, for those that have applied to Liquid Capital for the trainee trading role, where else have you applied? Tibra, Mako? Any others?
 
liquid capital numerical test

Hey all,

I went to the numerical test and don't know if I passed yet. I would have liked to be told the following about this to prepare better:
1) There's 35 questions to answer in 20 minutes, that's very short only 40 secs per questions
2) They put some background noise on whilst you're doing the test to simulate a trading environment, so prepare with music playing in the background
3) They put the sound up in the last 5 minutes when there's the most pressure to finish off your questions; that threw me off a bit
4) The questions are a piece of cake if you're well prepared, standard math questions, no logic or IQ-type questions, no algebra problems, just your standard graphs and tables with ratios, percentages, addition, substraction and multiplications to do. They're not trying to catch you out with it.
5) They operate a negative scoring system: if your answers are incorrect, you lose 2 points, if you don't answer, you lose a point (it could be the other way around, frankly, I was too concerned at the time with test difficulty to pay much attention to what was being said) - the point is; it's all about speed and accuracy like was said in the previous thread, so when you prepare, work on that, don't focus on tough questions you got wrong, the questions are easy.
6) Make sure you practice with a calculator and work on identifying numerical relationship to save time on calculations. Also make sure you know all your conversion tables off by heart ie kg, distance, billions, millions, etc... as there will be a lot of manipulations with big numbers.
7) To prepare I recommend: all the numerical tests you can find online, particularly, efinancialcareers, kent uni, shl etc... Also get yourself the Heidi Smith Numerical Reasoning tests and practice all the drills, memorize the conversion tables and create some more practice examples with large numbers for yourself. My favorite book mental math book is Henry Sticker's How to calculate quickly. I also recommend Mind Games by George Lane, mental math world champion. Practice makes perfect in speed math, there's a free software you can use on: Speed Math Trainer
which is quite useful.
8) Last piece of advice: if you're not up to scratch with your math, budget at least 2 months to prepare for a numerical test like this.

Has anyone got any advice on the interviews with Liquid?
 
Hi amtrader1,

Not sure if I'm too late mate but the interviews I had were fairly laid back. They really want to get a feel of what you're like and if you're 'street smart'. The more relaxed you are going into it the better you'll do.

I didn't cop any of the corny questions you might get in some interviews, i.e. If this happened how would you respond.... Both of the guys I spoke to throughout were good guys, it wasn't intimidating at all.

Cheers and good luck
 
Hi amtrader1,

Not sure if I'm too late mate but the interviews I had were fairly laid back. They really want to get a feel of what you're like and if you're 'street smart'. The more relaxed you are going into it the better you'll do.

I didn't cop any of the corny questions you might get in some interviews, i.e. If this happened how would you respond.... Both of the guys I spoke to throughout were good guys, it wasn't intimidating at all.

Cheers and good luck

When did you have your interview? Recently?

Did you just have an interview or was there more testing/games etc?
 
I've still not heard anything from them. It's a joke - I was told i'd hear by the end of this week.
 
yeah-they should probably halt all operations to speak to you.

They should - I can't even get through to the person who sent me the Email and have been told to hear by today - and if not mid week. Then mid week it'll be next week and so on...
 
They should - I can't even get through to the person who sent me the Email and have been told to hear by today - and if not mid week. Then mid week it'll be next week and so on...

Well, they do owe you the job after all...
 
it's not as if the markets are busy either.

If it's not a buyer's market, it's a seller's market and if there's nothing going on you can still arb it or even use some hedge strategies.

But this is besides the point. My only point was it would be nice if they're not interested to just send an Email (if this is the case.)
 
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