Skip to main content

Bloomberg Coding Interview Questions

32 Bloomberg coding interview problems with full optimal solutions — 16 easy, 13 medium, 3 hard. Every problem ships with multiple approaches (brute-force first, then the optimal), complexity tables for each, company-specific tips on what an Bloomberg interviewer values, and a FAQ section.

Showing 16 problems of 32

  • #217easyfoundational

    217. Contains Duplicate

    Bloomberg's data-ingestion pipelines must flag duplicate trade confirmations before they corrupt position ledgers — this warmup problem tests whether you instinctively reach for a hash set instead of nested loops when deduplication speed matters.

  • #412easyfoundational

    412. Fizz Buzz

    Bloomberg uses Fizz Buzz as a pure communication test — they want to hear you enumerate edge cases aloud (divisible by both 3 and 5 first), mirroring how Bloomberg engineers articulate business-rule precedence before touching a trading system's branching logic.

  • #1easyfoundational

    1. Two Sum

    Two Sum is the canonical Bloomberg warm-up: return the indices of two numbers in an array that add to a given target. Bloomberg uses it on phone screens to gauge whether you can narrate the space-for-time tradeoff before reaching for the optimal one-pass hash map.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #9easyfrequently asked

    9. Palindrome Number

    Given an integer x, return true if x is palindrome. Bloomberg uses this as a follow-up to Reverse Integer — they want to see the without-converting-to-string optimization to test whether you can think about numeric problems numerically.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #13easyfoundational

    13. Roman to Integer

    Convert a Roman-numeral string to an integer. Bloomberg uses this to test whether you can handle the subtractive notation (IV, IX, XL, XC, CD, CM) elegantly — the obvious solution has six special cases, the elegant one has none.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #14easyfrequently asked

    14. Longest Common Prefix

    Find the longest common prefix shared by an array of strings. Bloomberg uses this as a string-iteration test — they want clean code that handles the empty-input edge and discusses vertical vs horizontal scan tradeoffs.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #20easyfoundational

    20. Valid Parentheses

    Given a string containing only the characters '(', ')', '{', '}', '[' and ']', determine if it is balanced. Bloomberg asks this as a stack-fluency check: can you spot the data structure without prompting and implement it correctly on the first try.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #21easyfoundational

    21. Merge Two Sorted Lists

    Splice two ascending linked lists into one sorted list. Bloomberg uses this to test pointer hygiene and the dummy-head trick — they want clean code with no special-case branching for the empty-list edge.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #28easyfrequently asked

    28. Find the Index of the First Occurrence in a String

    Implement strStr() — return the index of the first occurrence of needle in haystack, or -1. Bloomberg uses this as the gateway to substring algorithms: brute force is fine for warm-up, but they always probe for KMP if the conversation goes deeper.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #121easycompany favorite

    121. Best Time to Buy and Sell Stock

    Given a daily price series, return the maximum profit from one buy + one sell. Bloomberg leans on this for finance-engineering candidates — it's a single-pass greedy that mirrors the real-world 'running max profit' calculation traders care about.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #125easyfrequently asked

    125. Valid Palindrome

    Given a string, determine if it's a palindrome after removing non-alphanumeric characters and ignoring case. Bloomberg uses this to test two-pointer fluency plus a careful handling of mixed-content strings.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #136easyfrequently asked

    136. Single Number

    Every element appears twice except one. Find the one. Bloomberg uses this to test the XOR trick — they want the linear-time, constant-space solution, not the hash-set fallback.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #168easyfrequently asked

    168. Excel Sheet Column Title

    Convert a positive integer to its Excel-style column title (A, B, ..., Z, AA, AB, ...). Bloomberg uses this to test whether you can handle a base-26 conversion with the 1-indexed twist that breaks standard base-conversion code.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #206easyfoundational

    206. Reverse Linked List

    Reverse a singly linked list. Bloomberg uses this as a linked-list fluency check — they want to see both the iterative pointer-rewire and the recursive version, plus an articulate reason for picking one over the other.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #268easyfrequently asked

    268. Missing Number

    An array of n distinct numbers in [0, n] is missing one. Find it. Bloomberg uses this to test whether you know multiple O(n)/O(1) tricks — sum formula AND XOR fold — and can pick between them based on the input constraints.

    3 free resourcesSolve →
  • #387easyfrequently asked

    387. First Unique Character in a String

    Given a string, find the index of the first non-repeating character, or -1 if all repeat. Bloomberg uses this as a hash-map fluency warm-up — they want a two-pass O(n) with a discussion of LinkedHashMap (or ordered Map) as an alternative.

    3 free resourcesSolve →

Related interview-prep guides

Interview Platforms

HackerRank Tech Interview Guide 2026: What It Tests, How It Tracks You, and the Modern Setup

HackerRank is still the volume leader in first-round technical screens for 2026 tech hiring. A browser-sandboxed coding environment that logs every keystroke, paste event, and tab-focus change inside its own tab. This guide covers what it tests, the boundary of what it can and cannot detect, and how a modern desktop setup pairs with a HackerRank session without leaking into the screen-share.

Interview Process

The 2026 CS New-Grad Interview Loop: Phone Screen to Offer at Every Tier

The 2026 CS new-grad interview loop runs five steps (recruiter screen, technical screen, onsite, debrief, offer) but the shape of each step now depends on tier of company. This guide maps the loop for FAANG, mid-tier public, startup, consultancy, and research lab, with 2026 timelines and how AI-fraud concerns brought in-person rounds back.

Interview Process

Technical Phone Screen: Tips, Questions, and Tactics for CS New Grads (2026)

A technical phone screen is a 30-60 minute interview, usually one or two coding problems on a shared editor, with audio-only or light-video, that decides whether you advance to the onsite. It measures whether you can clarify, code, and talk through reasoning at the same time. This guide covers what a technical phone screen is, the questions that come up most, how to prepare in the 24 hours before, how to think out loud when the interviewer goes silent, how to recover from a freeze, and what counts as legitimate prep tooling versus the cheating-economy traps that get candidates rejected in the loop after.

Bloomberg Coding Interview Questions — Full Solutions — InterviewChamp.AI