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Sign Up Now- I don't like the format nor that two headlines "Experience" and "Interests and leadership experience". Looks very cramped, where is the Interests section? I'd transform your whole CV into the M&I format, your current one is just bad IMO.
- gallery visits …) - remove "..."
- Summer Analyst (unpaid internship – should I leave this out?), yes, you should leave it out and don't write "Summer Analyst" just write "Summer Internship" - make it less douchey, you just graduated high school at the time, you are no Analyst. Reminds me of the guy who hosted an AMA on TSR saying "he works in the City" - meanwhile he just graduated sixth form and was just a intern in the middle office for that summer.
- That being said, remove the whole section "Investment Management" and keep your speculation endeavours only to your interviews (maybe list it in the interests section, saying sth like "Traded on the XYZ exchange", if you really want to put it on your CV). So about the removal: this whole part could come off in a bad way, it doesn't worth it. For instance: "Managing investments" is a strong word for taking directional bets on stocks (even if you took a look at some 10-Ks or checked the MACD, it doesn't mean anything) but there are a number of other things which doesn't click with this section as well (made 17% in a year with a couple of grands, so what?)
Also remove this: "beat benchmark by 5% in 4 months"
- Try list some experience which is not finance
Other than the above, you have definitely good chances for interviews.
Thanks for your input. I have couple of questions.
I have originally used M&I Template, but after getting my CV looked over by few people in the industry (2 analyst (GS, CS), and HR at Blackrock) I was suggested to change the format, because A LOT of students use M&I template and it is better to have slightly changed format so you get noticed more quickly. I know these were just opinions from few people. So I would consider changing the format.
What should I put instead of Investment management? Maybe trading online brokerage account? I want to keep it on my CV as I was told by the people I listed above that it is great section for demonstrating interest, involvement, that I am a self-starter - quoting someone "there is no better way to learn about the markets, than being actively "in" the markets. But I will try to reformat it.
Why should I leave out "beating benchmark"? I thought expressing things quantitatively and detailed is better than just plain bullet points.
Non-finance experience- should I include I was par-time waiter for almost 4 years and that I was tutoring 5 students in last 2 years of high school?
I disagree actually.
I think you should leave "Summer Analyst" in as it sounds like a lot of what you did anyway was pretty much along those lines and I also think you should leave the "beat the benchmark by 5% in 4 months" in also as it sounds more impressive and quantifies everything well.
I'd move your address to the top also.
I'm also happy with the Managing Investments bit because you said you used "technical analysis" and also we want to know what the result of this activity was so leave the 17%.
Don't list all the products, just group them into "equities, FX, ETFs and a variety of derivatives"
For example, with your second point on the Economics & Finance Society, you don't say what the result was of your investing? How much did you make? If you lost money then leave it obviously but perhaps highlight one investment that did well.
The only problem I have with that is that it may come off the wrong way. Beating the benchmark by 5% in 4 months - might sound like you would like to indicate that how a hotshot you are at asset management - when really it means nothing.
Using technical analysis (drawing trendlines and watching MACD or RSI is sth my grandmother could do) - no offense really, I just think it adds close to 0 value to your resume. Absolutely no problem listing you are speculating on the global markets with your money, trying to evaluate news and make money off it - only issue I see is the way of selling it.
Dealing with a variety of products: again, nothing much. You just choose an ETF instead of a stock and click Sell. Carry trading in FX takes 2 min as well.
But all right, perhaps the above is just me.
@Mr. Exclusive Thanks for your input also, will include waiter job and tutoring. What do you think about the format of my CV?
Here is another update (deleted strategies under Investment Management section, added Interests, corrected design)
ThisJust a passing comment, but I think you're wasting an incredible amount of space by putting your dates on the left hand side. If you move them to the right, you'll free up a lot of room, you'll take emphasis off the dates and put it on your university, etc., and you'll be able to have a more relaxed structure.