Hunter Bond
Quant Software Engineer — Build the Systems Behind Real-World Trading Intelligence : £300k+

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Quant Software Engineer
We’re looking for a Quant Software Engineer who thrives at the intersection of rigorous mathematics, high-performance engineering, and real-world financial systems. This is a role for someone who enjoys turning complex quantitative ideas into robust, production-grade software that runs at scale—and under pressure.
The Role
You will work closely with quants, researchers, and traders to design and implement systems that power pricing, risk, and trading strategies. Your work will directly influence live decisions in fast-moving markets, where correctness, latency, and reliability all matter at once.
This isn’t just a “build models” role, and it isn’t just “write backend services” either. It’s both—plus the engineering discipline to make it all hold together in production.
What You’ll Do
- Design and build high-performance systems supporting quantitative research and trading workflows
- Translate mathematical and statistical models into production-grade code
- Develop and optimise low-latency services for data processing and execution
- Build robust data pipelines, simulation frameworks, and analytics tooling
- Collaborate closely with quantitative researchers to refine models and assumptions
- Improve research-to-production infrastructure and deployment workflows
Reasons to use Rodeo
I’m in my final year doing Economics and I don’t know whether to apply for grad schemes now or do a masters first. What do you think?
Honest answer — it depends on where you want to end up. A lot of top grad schemes (Big 4, civil service, banking) don’t need a masters. Let’s look at the ones you’d be competitive for now, and we can decide if a masters actually adds anything.
Also worth knowing: most autumn 2026 applications are open now. Timing matters more than you think.
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Grad scheme, placement, apprenticeship? Not sure what you want yet — that's fine. Your agent talks it through with you and turns "I have no idea" into a shortlist.
Graduate Consultant — 2026 Scheme
Why you're a good match
StrongYour economics background and your summer at a regional bank line up with what PwC looks for on the consulting scheme. Applications close in four weeks.
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Every day your agent scans the market matching roles against what actually matters to you, not just keywords on a CV.
Why you're a good match
You’ve got the grades and the economics background, and your bank internship is exactly the experience this scheme looks for. Apply soon — deadlines close within the month.
Experience fit
Your summer at the bank plus your econometrics coursework map directly to the day-one responsibilities on this scheme — client modelling, market briefings, and deal support.
Only hits
No noise. No "maybe this fits." Just roles with a clear explanation of why they're right — and where to focus when applying.
Tech Stack
We don’t expect you to know everything—but experience in parts of the following stack is highly relevant:
- Core Languages: C++, Python, Rust
- Quant & Data: NumPy, pandas, SciPy, Jupyter
- Data Infrastructure: Kafka, Redis, PostgreSQL, kdb+ (or similar time-series databases)
- Distributed Systems: Microservices architectures, gRPC, REST APIs
- Cloud & Infrastructure: AWS / GCP, Docker, Kubernetes
- Performance & Systems: Low-latency optimisation, multithreading, memory management
- CI/CD & DevOps: Git, CI pipelines, automated testing frameworks


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What We’re Looking For
We’re looking for engineers who combine strong software fundamentals with genuine quantitative curiosity.
- You should be comfortable with systems-level thinking, performance optimisation, and writing clean, maintainable code in a production environment.
- A strong background in one or more of C++, Python, or similar languages is expected.
- You’ll likely have experience with data structures, algorithms, and distributed systems, and you’ll be confident reasoning about trade-offs between speed, accuracy, and complexity.
- A degree in Computer Science, Mathematics, Physics, Engineering, or a related discipline is typical—but what matters most is how you think and build.
- Exposure to quantitative finance, trading systems, or numerical methods is a strong plus, but not strictly required if you can demonstrate equivalent depth elsewhere.
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