Interview Prep for Event Driven HF?

I have an interview lined up with a typical event driven / special situations hedge fund for the next week. I invest on my own and my style is fairly easy to follow: value-driven, require margin of safety, clear catalysts, buy something that's hated / tumbled. I had interviews with several typical L/S fund and all went well. I have no problems discussing current markets, investment philosophy, my stock picks, etc.

Two questions:
1) Is the prep work any different for an event-driven HF?
2) I checked their portfolio, and it has JPM ,C, AAPL, MSFT, and all kinds of companies that are certainly not going through a bankruptcy or restructuring, and won't be acquired in the near nor far future. How do these investments fall into the event driven / special situations category?

 
The Phantom:
1) Is the prep work any different for an event-driven HF? 2) I checked their portfolio, and it has JPM ,C, AAPL, MSFT, and all kinds of companies that are certainly not going through a bankruptcy or restructuring, and won't be acquired in the near nor far future. How do these investments fall into the event driven / special situations category?

1) Preparing shouldn't require much incremental effort. In general pitching "value with a catalyst" works well for all buyside interviews. 2) They're parking money.

 
Best Response
Mr. Pink Money:
The Phantom:
1) Is the prep work any different for an event-driven HF? 2) I checked their portfolio, and it has JPM ,C, AAPL, MSFT, and all kinds of companies that are certainly not going through a bankruptcy or restructuring, and won't be acquired in the near nor far future. How do these investments fall into the event driven / special situations category?

1) Preparing shouldn't require much incremental effort. In general pitching "value with a catalyst" works well for all buyside interviews. 2) They're parking money.

I'd also add that damn near every equity fund in the world says they invest with "special situations with catalysts" regardless of how focused they are on "hard-catalyst" situations (distressed, merger arb, spin-off, activist, etc) versus just "this is under valued and here's my 'catalyst' that will unlock the value."

There have been many great comebacks throughout history. Jesus was dead but then came back as an all-powerful God-Zombie.
 

I think the key would be to show that you are in tune with world events of relevance, as well as a knowledge of macro-economics and the global intertwinement of individual economies.

"They are all former investment bankers that were laid off in the economic collapse that Nancy Pelosi caused. They have no marketable skills, but by God they work hard."
 
CountryUnderdog:
I think the key would be to show that you are in tune with world events of relevance, as well as a knowledge of macro-economics and the global intertwinement of individual economies.

I would not expect that to come up at the type of fund he described.

There have been many great comebacks throughout history. Jesus was dead but then came back as an all-powerful God-Zombie.
 

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