How would you answer this mutual fund interview question - what is your best and worst investment?
I have final rounds with a mutual fund next week. They have asked me to prepare my "best and worst investments" to discuss.
Like my previous e-mail, I think that term is totally open to interpretation. How would people define their "best investment?"
- Most P&L?
- Best investment IRR?
- Most mispriced investment you took advantage of, though not necessarily the highest P&L or IRR?
- Most insightful analysis (being right for the right reasons?)
- Best contrarian pick?
- Situation where you had to get active to make things happen?
Love any perspective on this!
I think that you can't determine how exactly this question will be asked in advance. I'd prep an answer for every interpretation of the statement you can come up with, then gauge the interviewer's leaning during the interview.
Yes, that is definitely open to interpretation. FWIW, here are my thoughts. I think as long as you can articulate and defend your best/ worst investments, what you learned from them, etc. you should be ok. If it is for a specific type of fund (e.g. value) I would try and select an investment in that vein. They are likely trying to gauge your critical thinking and analytical skills besides whether or not you made some great returns. They can’t verify the trades anyway… being right is great, but were you right because everything in that sector and the market went up, or did you select a superior equity (or bond or whatever) – why and what led you to that conclusion and how did you act.
I actually read this more as a behavioral type question than a 100% performance based Q.
Explain more? thanks
I agree, if someone asked me this, I'd answer like this:
"my worst investment was back in (year). I decided to buy XYZ at around $x.xx. My thesis was [insert thesis]. I was wrong because I didn't consider Blahblahblah, I wasn't patient enough, and failed to take into account we were in a bubble. thankfully, I haven't made the same mistake since."
the idea being "this one thing didn't work out for me, but I've taken time to reflect on why it didn't, and most importantly, here's how it's made me a better investor."
for the best investment, I would insert a little humility. for example, did you pick up some AAPL in june 2013 at 60? did you pick up SBUX at Buffett gets kicked in the nuts every once in a while.
my worst investment was my former gf
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best investment is one that you make based on facts/thesis/research worst investment is one made on emotion, news, rumors, and throwing good money after bad if the position turns red.
A
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