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The unusual riddle Goldman Sachs might ask you in a quant job interview

If you thought our 101 interview questions asked by Goldman Sachs weren't hard enough... you might be a quant. Quant interviews are typically the hardest of the lot. 

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A Goldman Sachs quant told us that, as part of her interview process at the firm a few years ago, she was asked a series of seven riddles in an hour. This was the least complicated of them:

"In a room there are 253 lions and one steak. The steak is poisoned, so that if a Lion eats the steak, it will fall asleep. While asleep, the other lions will treat it the same as they would treat the steak. If another lion eats the poisoned lion, it too will fall asleep. Each of the lions is intelligent, and aware of the poison and its effects. Do any of the lions eat the steak?"

Think you know the answer? Put it in the comments, and don't cheat by looking at the quant's explanation below! 😑

In a question like this, the process is always more important than the answer, after all there are only two options here, and you could just get lucky. The quant told us that it was all about breaking down the problem into its simplest form. She told us she started with one lion and worked her way up.

One lion would eat the steak, knowing no other lions are around to eat it. If there were two, neither would eat it, because the other lion would eat it along with the steak. If there were three, one would eat the steak, knowing the other two lions wouldn't eat it, for fear of being eaten themselves when they fall asleep. In the case of four lions, none would volunteer, knowing that a group of three would be left behind and that one of them would eat the lion. In a group of five lions, one would eat the steak, because a group of four would remain, and the rationale in that group would be the same as mentioned above.

Continuing this process, a pattern emerged for the quant, in which a lion will eat the steak on an odd number, but avoid it on an even. So, when there are 253 lions, the answer would be yes.

Of course, if you can more effectively argue a reason why it would be no, Goldman Sachs would be all ears. For example, there is a possibility that the lions would all be too risk-averse to participate in a chain that could easily kill them. If you think the answer is the opposite, let us know why.

Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: Telegram: @AlexMcMurray, WhatsApp: (+1 269 237 3950)Click here to fill in our anonymous form, or email editortips@efinancialcareers.com. Signal also available.

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AUTHORAlex McMurray Reporter

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