Fail this question you should give up trading

Quote from knifecatcher:

A bunch of us saw a guy on the street flipping a coin and got heads 10 times in a row. We decide to bet among ourselves. Would you bet on head or tail on the next flip of coin?

Heads, it's a two-"headed" coin. :p
 
I would knock the guy over steal his quarter, bet on heads and make the coin come up heads. Isn't that what market makers do pretty much :D

Quote from knifecatcher:

A bunch of us saw a guy on the street flipping a coin and got heads 10 times in a row. We decide to bet among ourselves. Would you bet on head or tail on the next flip of coin?
 
Quote from knifecatcher:

A bunch of us saw a guy on the street flipping a coin and got heads 10 times in a row. We decide to bet among ourselves. Would you bet on head or tail on the next flip of coin?

It has to be tails, because Victor Niederhoffer said there is no such thing as a trend.:)
 
The answer is (according to Barry Greenstein the poker player):

1) Novice will say tail (Not necessarily true, I think Mark D. Cook would say tail too according to some of his material)

2) The mathematician will say there is no edge. The next flip of anything is 50:50 (independent events)

3) The experienced gambler will bet on head but never bet against the flipper because in the real world, it is likely something funny going on with that coin or the flipper.
 
Quote from WallstYouth:The question explicitly asked how much distance the bird travels after an hour the cars and the distance between them have really no bearings on the question itself.

2 Cars are traveling from opposite directions towards each other, each car is traveling excatly 50Mph, a bird flying along side one of the cars is traveling at 60 Mph how much miles will the bird cover back and forth between each car after 1 hour?
Are we missing something here? Allegedly the question explicitly asked "how much distance the bird travels after an hour," yet simple reading of the question states that it in fact explicitly asked "how much miles will the bird cover back and forth between each car after 1 hour"

So it is indeed a "trick question" and the real question was actually stated in the first sentence "Very simple question yet so many recruits get it wrong why?"

The answer to the question [why?] is simply that the interview question is missing important information and therefore the recruits answer with what they think the interviewer would like to hear, rather than risk insulting the interviewer's intelligence by saying that that the question is indeed faulty.
 
Quote from riskarb:

What happened to the recruiter that posed this question? Spontaneous combustion? Beaten to death by the applicants?

Looks like Chuck Norris got to him...

And I think he also ate the bird.
 
Quote from knifecatcher:

The answer is (according to Barry Greenstein the poker player):

1) Novice will say tail (Not necessarily true, I think Mark D. Cook would say tail too according to some of his material)

2) The mathematician will say there is no edge. The next flip of anything is 50:50

3) The experienced gambler will bet on head but never bet against the flipper because in the real world, it is likely something funny going on with that coin or the flipper.


Yeah, we got it. This question was posed by our 3rd grade math teacher.
 
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