The tenth edition contains 165 quantitative questions collected from actual job interviews in investment banking, investment management, and options trading. The interviewers use the same questions year-after-year and here they are---with solutions! These questions come from all types of interviews (corporate finance, sales and trading, quant research, etc), but they are especially likely in quantitative capital markets job interviews. The questions come from all levels of interviews (undergrad, MBA, PhD), but they are especially likely if you have, or almost have, an MS or MBA. The latest edition includes over 120 non-quantitative actual interview questions, and a new section on interview technique---based partly on Dr. Crack's experiences interviewing candidates for the world's largest institutional asset manager. Dr. Crack has a PhD from MIT. He has won many teaching awards and has publications in the top academic, practitioner, and teaching journals in finance. He has degrees in Mathematics/Statistics, Finance, and Financial Economics and a diploma in Accounting/Finance. Dr. Crack taught at the university level for 20 years including four years as a front line teaching assistant for MBA students at MIT. He recently headed a quantitative active equity research team at the world's largest institutional money manager.
I hate what this books represents: a "how-to" manual to game the interview system of Wall St companies. But it does what it says on the tin, and well: although it was written years before my interviews, I still encountered several of the questions.
Good practice in getting my critical thinking skills ready and helped me land a nice front-office job! Useful tips on what interviewers think are dropped throughout, which I can testify are true based on my job search experience during the past few months. Will probably reference it again every so often.
Here's a rarity (particularly for finance books): a book that delivers exactly what it claims to deliver. While Heard on the Street is no substitute for more textbook-like offerings when it comes to learning the field, it does give an excellent idea of what a person applying for a job on Wall Street needs to be prepared to answer (cooly and efficiently) in the actual interview. The probability problems and brain teasers cover all of the most frequently recurring themes in their respective categories, and the questions related to equity options are accompanied by excellent explanations that emphasize intuition and understanding of the subtleties of questions designed to trip you up. Very, very useful.
This book does what it says--gives many good problems which double as interview questions and gives solutions. It helps to prepare the reader well for the 'quant' interviews since so many problems are canned or just similar to those given in the book. Worth it.