MIT to Point72 Internship: How a STEM Student Broke into Hedge Fund Investing

MIT to point72 intern

For many MIT students exploring a finance career, recruiting often begins and ends with algorithms, trading systems, and quantitative strategies. With a background in Mathematics, AI, and Physics research, my STEM to finance transition initially seemed destined for the quant track.

But my eventual Point72 internship offer for Summer 2027 didn’t come from staying in that lane.

It came from stepping out of it.

Many MIT students pursue hedge fund recruiting through quantitative or technical roles, but fewer successfully transition into fundamental investing roles on the buy-side.

This is the story of how I successed moved from quant to fundamental investing, and how preparation, mentorship, and timing converged to turn unexpected opportunities into a buy-side offer.

From STEM to Finance Transition at MIT

MIT college

Coming from a family in finance, I initially resisted the industry entirely. I wanted academic depth, not market pressure.

At MIT, I spent time in physics research labs, but something didn’t click. The feedback cycle was slow—years of work without clear signals of progress.

I realized I thrive in environments where decisions have immediate consequences and intellectual output has ownership.

That realization reshaped my direction.

I joined One Strategy Group early in my freshman year for structured finance career coaching after researching paths like how to get a job in investment banking and buy-side recruiting.

I joined One Strategy Group early in my freshman year for structured finance career coaching—not because I had a fixed goal, but because I understood one truth about finance recruiting:

Information asymmetry is often more important than ability.

The Goldman Sachs Equity Research Interview: 12 Hours to Prepare

My first real exposure to fundamental investing came unexpectedly.

I applied for a Goldman Sachs Equity Research role and unexpectedly advanced to the Goldman Sachs equity research interview final round.

That night, I worked with OSG mentors to rapidly build a structured financial framework from scratch.

I wasn’t from a traditional accounting or finance background. I couldn’t rely on memorized valuation models.

So I leaned into what I did know: structured thinking, curiosity and the in-demand skills for high-paying jobs.

During the interview, most of the conversation centered on a stablecoin research project I had been exploring at MIT. That experience later helped me build a stronger stock pitch for hedge fund interviews.

It didn’t feel like an exam. It felt like a discussion.

Later, I learned I was a backup candidate after another applicant dropped out.

That moment reframed everything:

Opportunities are often random. What determines outcomes is whether you can execute when randomness arrives.

Building a Stock Pitch for Hedge Fund Interviews

After receiving the Goldman offer, something shifted.

Fundamental research stopped being “foreign” and became genuinely engaging.

With guidance from my OSG mentor Steven, I began refining my investment thinking around fintech and payments.

We focused on:

  • Breaking down Circle’s valuation logic
  • Stress-testing revenue assumptions in payment systems
  • Identifying bearish counterarguments early in the process

These sessions were not casual reviews—they were rigorous pressure tests.

My stock pitch evolved into a framework ready for any hedge fund interview.

This eventually helped me:

  • Join my school’s hedge fund club
  • Enter a Point72 stock pitch competition
  • Qualify for accelerated interview rounds

At One Strategy Group, we work with students navigating this transition through structured mentorship, stock pitch development, and buy-side recruiting preparation.

👉 Explore OSG Mentorship Programs

From Rejection to Hedge Fund Internship Offer

My first Point72 attempt ended with a clear rejection:

“Not quant enough.”

At the time, it felt like a mismatch between identity and expectation.

But it forced a decision:

  • Stay in safer, technical roles
  • Or commit fully to fundamental investing

I chose the second path.

By the next recruiting cycle, I wasn’t just presenting a pitch.

I was presenting conviction backed by repeated iteration.

The Final Round: Pressure, Uncertainty, and Clarity

A week before my final Point72 interview, anxiety peaked.

Not because I lacked preparation—but because I had prepared extensively, and still questioned whether it was enough.

On the day of the interview, everything felt unusually calm.

Earlier that week, I had even taken a break, sitting in Central Park watching skaters on the ice, trying to reset my thinking.

centre park

That mental distance mattered more than I expected.

By that stage, I understood how competitive MIT student hedge fund recruiting had become.

I was conversing.

I spoke with portfolio managers about stablecoin regulation, valuation gaps, and long-term fintech trends.

After the interview, feedback was positive.

The result followed soon after.

Tactical Lessons for Winning a Hedge Fund Internship

What is the Point72 internship recruiting process like?

Point72 recruiting typically involves multiple rounds of interviews focusing on investment thinking, stock pitch quality, and the ability to form independent views on markets.

  • Don’t recruit for recruiting’s sake

Real differentiation comes from genuine intellectual curiosity, not optimized resumes.

  • Pressure-test your investment thesis early

A strong pitch is not written—it is repeatedly challenged until it holds up under scrutiny.

  • Treat interviews as conversations, not exams

Buy-side firms evaluate thinking, not memorization.

  • Luck opens doors—but preparation determines outcomes

Unexpected opportunities are common. Execution is not.

Conclusion: Preparation Meets Opportunity

When I received the call confirming my Point72 internship offer, I was asleep. There was no dramatic reaction—just a quiet sense of resolution.

Looking back, the path wasn’t linear. It rarely is. But one principle remained consistent:

Opportunities are unpredictable. Readiness is not.

The door was never the achievement.

Walking through it was.