● LIVE PREP FCA · MAR · MiFID II INTERDEALER BROKER SURVEILLANCE · L1 TRIAGE BELFAST · TP ICAP

Compliance Monitoring
Associate

TP ICAP · Belfast Centre of Excellence · Interview Prep

Tailored for Finn Hampton · BEng Civil Eng · CFA L1 (May 2026)
0 / 26 reviewed
Why This Role & Company
01
You studied civil engineering. Why are you moving into compliance and financial services?
Motivation
What they're testing
This is the question your CV invites first. They want to know the pivot is deliberate and considered, not a fallback. The good news: your story is genuinely strong — you've already started moving from engineering into data, process and finance.
Your evidenceLead with the CFA. "I'm studying for CFA Level 1 in May 2026 — that's not something you do casually. My engineering degree gave me the analytical and numerical foundation, but I found I was most drawn to the commercial and data side. My current role at McColgans moved me from the warehouse floor into digital process analysis, and compliance monitoring is the natural next step: analytical, rules-based, and consequential."
02
Why TP ICAP? What do you know about us as a business?
Motivation
What they're testing
Basic preparation. Know what an interdealer broker is, that TP ICAP is the largest in the world, and why the Belfast Centre matters. As a local Strabane candidate, the Belfast hub is also a genuine geographic draw worth mentioning.
Key points: World's largest interdealer broker — connects banks, hedge funds and institutions trading wholesale instruments (rates, FX, fixed income, commodities, equities). Not a retail bank. The Belfast Centre has 450+ colleagues across tech, ops, finance and compliance. Compliance is critical because TP ICAP operates in heavily regulated markets under FCA oversight.
Your angleA serious financial-markets employer with a major presence within commuting distance of Strabane is rare. You're motivated to build a finance career locally rather than relocate — and TP ICAP Belfast is exactly that opportunity.
03
This is an entry-level role. With a degree and a job already, why start here?
Motivation
What they're testing
They want commitment and self-awareness, not someone who'll be restless in six months. Frame the entry point as the right way to build genuine compliance expertise.
Your evidenceUse your McColgans trajectory. "I've already shown I'll start at the right level and earn progression — I began as a part-time stores operative and worked up into a digital analyst role over four years. I'd rather learn surveillance properly from the alert level up than skip the foundation. That's also why I'm doing the CFA — I want the technical grounding to back the practical experience."
04
Where do you see yourself in 3–5 years?
Motivation
What they're testing
Ambition that fits the role and the firm — progression through compliance, not using it as a quick exit.
Your angleMap it out: L1 triage → L2 investigation → Compliance Monitoring Officer, with the CFA and possibly compliance-specific qualifications (e.g. CISI) alongside. Mention your interest in the data/analytics side of surveillance — with your SQL and Power BI background, you can credibly aim to contribute to alert tuning and surveillance analytics over time.
05
What from your background makes you a strong fit for surveillance monitoring specifically?
Motivation
What they're testing
Your chance to connect the dots explicitly. Don't make them work it out — map your experience onto what L1 surveillance actually requires.
Your evidenceName three things: (1) audit and reconciliation experience — you supported year-end audits, verified records against purchase orders, and reconciled physical stock to system data, which is exactly the "does this match, and if not why" discipline surveillance needs. (2) Process mapping — your current role is literally about spotting where defined processes break down. (3) Data fluency — SQL, Power BI, reporting. All three map directly onto reviewing alerts, spotting anomalies, and documenting findings.
Behavioural · STAR Format
06
Tell me about a time you had to process a high volume of work accurately under time pressure.
Competency
Why they ask this
Alert triage is a volume job — accuracy can't drop when the queue grows.
Your storyYear-end audit support at McColgans: verifying inventory records, goods-receipt notes and purchase orders to a deadline, where errors carried straight through to the accounts. Talk about how you kept accuracy up under audit-deadline pressure.
07
Describe a time you spotted a discrepancy or error others had missed.
Competency
Why they ask this
Surveillance is anomaly detection — noticing what doesn't add up.
Your storyReconciling physical stock against system records, or resolving delivery discrepancies against purchase orders. Pick a specific instance where the numbers didn't match, you investigated, and you found the cause. That is the surveillance mindset in a different setting.
08
Tell me about a time you had to follow a strict process even when you weren't sure it was right.
Competency
Why they ask this
Compliance is process discipline — apply the framework, document, escalate, don't freelance.
Your storyGoods-receipt verification against purchase orders, or supporting external auditors with controlled access to GRNs and delivery notes — situations where you followed the control process precisely because the audit trail mattered more than speed.
09
Describe a time you escalated something to a senior colleague. How did you decide?
Competency
Why they ask this
The whole L1/L2 model runs on escalation judgement.
Your storyIn your current role you work with senior managers to identify process improvements — use an example where you surfaced an issue or a poorly-defined process to a senior manager rather than trying to resolve it alone, and how you framed it so they could act.
10
Tell me about a time you learned a new system or subject quickly from scratch.
Competency
Why they ask this
Career changers must absorb new domains fast. You have strong evidence here.
Your storySelf-teaching the Power Platform (Power Automate, PowerApps, Power BI) and SQL for your digital analyst role, or studying CFA Level 1 alongside full-time work. Either shows structured, self-directed learning under real constraints.
11
Describe a time you worked across teams to solve a problem.
Competency
Why they ask this
Monitoring is collaborative — L1 works with L2, CMOs and desk reviewers.
Your storyYou've worked with cross-functional departments (Finance, Supply Chain, HR) to resolve discrepancies and build reports, and with finance teams to reconcile stock. Pick one where collaboration across functions was what actually solved the problem.
12
Tell me about a time you received critical feedback and how you responded.
Competency
Why they ask this
Entry-level work involves constant correction — they want someone coachable.
Pick a real example — ideally from the transition into your analyst role or university group projects. Listened, didn't get defensive, implemented the change, improved the outcome. Keep it honest and specific.
13
Describe a time you juggled competing priorities. How did you decide what came first?
Competency
Why they ask this
Daily queues, periodic reviews and ad hoc requests often collide.
Your storyWorking part-time at McColgans while completing a BEng — and now studying CFA Level 1 alongside a full-time role — is concrete evidence of prioritising competing demands. Explain your actual system for deciding what gets done first.
Role Knowledge · Regulation · Markets
14
What is an interdealer broker, and where does TP ICAP sit in the markets?
Technical
Model answer
An interdealer broker (IDB) is an intermediary between major institutions — banks, hedge funds, asset managers — helping them trade wholesale instruments in over-the-counter (OTC) markets that have no central exchange. TP ICAP is the world's largest IDB, across fixed income, rates, FX, commodities and equities, providing price discovery, liquidity and execution. Regulated by the FCA.
Why it matters for compliance: huge volumes of complex OTC trades across jurisdictions mean significant market-abuse and conduct risk. The compliance function detects it; your role is the front line of that detection.
15
What is market abuse? Give two or three examples.
Technical
Know these cold
Insider dealing: trading on material, non-public information.

Layering / spoofing: placing large orders with no intent to execute, to create a false impression of supply/demand, then cancelling.

Wash trading: trades where the same party is effectively both buyer and seller — artificial volume, no genuine transfer of risk.

Front running: dealing ahead of a known client order to benefit from the resulting price move.

Pump and dump: spreading misleading information to inflate a price before selling.
Tip: pick three, name them cleanly, explain the mechanism, and say why surveillance systems flag the pattern. Don't try to recite all five.
16
What is the Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) and why does it matter here?
Technical
Model answer
UK MAR is the post-Brexit domestic regulation (retained from EU MAR) prohibiting insider dealing, unlawful disclosure of inside information, and market manipulation. Firms must have systems and controls to detect and report suspicious activity; failure can mean FCA enforcement, fines and reputational damage.
The reporting link: suspicious trades/orders lead to a Suspicious Transaction and Order Report (STOR) filed with the FCA. The L1→L2 process feeds the decision on whether a STOR is warranted.
17
What is MiFID II and what does it require around surveillance?
Technical
Model answer
MiFID II is the EU framework (with UK-retained equivalents post-Brexit) requiring firms to monitor trading activity, detect market abuse, keep records and report to regulators in a timely way. For TP ICAP this means robust trade and communications surveillance plus documented escalation — exactly what this role supports.
Tip: you don't need deep MiFID II knowledge — just that it's the framework requiring surveillance, and that this role helps fulfil it.
18
Explain trade surveillance vs communications surveillance.
Technical
Model answer
Trade / order surveillance: automated monitoring of trades and orders for patterns indicating manipulation, front running or insider dealing — flagging anomalies in size, timing or price for human review.

Communications surveillance: monitoring broker calls, chats and emails for language or behaviour suggesting abuse, breached information barriers or collusion — often keyword- and increasingly AI-driven.
Your L1 role: first human reviewer of alerts from both systems — assess genuine concern vs false positive, document reasoning, escalate where warranted.
19
What does a Level 1 analyst do, and how does it differ from Level 2?
Technical
Model answer
L1 (this role): initial triage — review system-generated alerts, assess against defined criteria, document reasoning, and decide close vs escalate. Keep daily queues current and flag false-positive patterns for alert tuning.

L2: deeper investigation of escalated alerts — broader data review, and a recommendation on whether to file a STOR or take further action.
20
The role mentions AI and data science in surveillance. What's your view?
Technical
What they're testing
Curiosity and direction of travel, not expertise. AI/ML increasingly reduces false positives, detects subtle cross-dataset patterns, and surfaces communications anomalies keyword systems miss — but human context still matters.
Your edgeThis is where you stand out from a typical entry-level candidate. You actually build with data — SQL, Power BI, SSRS reporting. Say it: "I work with SQL and Power BI day to day, so I understand both the value and the limits of automated flagging. A model surfaces candidates; a human contextualises them. With my background I'd hope to contribute to the alert-tuning side over time, not just process the queue." Genuine, specific, and hard to fake.
Scenario-Based · What Would You Do?
21
An alert doesn't clearly meet the escalation criteria, but something feels off. What do you do?
Situational
Model answer
Escalate and document. You're not the final decision-maker. A false positive reaching L2 is a minor inefficiency; a genuine issue closed at L1 is a regulatory and reputational failure.
Frame it: "I'd document what the alert showed, what the criteria said, and exactly what felt inconsistent — then escalate with those notes so L2 can decide with full context. The cost of over-escalating is low; the cost of under-escalating isn't."
22
One alert type is generating ~90% false positives. What do you do?
Situational
Model answer
Not close them faster — document the pattern, raise it with your CMO, and suggest the parameters need review. Alert tuning is explicitly part of this role.
Your edgeThis is your process-improvement and data background showing. "I'd track it over a meaningful sample, not one bad day, and bring specific data to my manager. High false-positive rates drain capacity and cause alert fatigue, which is itself a surveillance risk. Spotting where a defined process isn't working well is exactly what I do in my current role." Tie it straight to your value-stream-mapping work.
23
You're behind on your queue and a senior colleague asks for help. How do you handle it?
Situational
Model answer
Communicate and prioritise — don't silently drop the queue. Surveillance alerts carry SLA expectations; an unflagged backlog is a regulatory risk.
Answer: "I'd be transparent about where I am on my queue, ask my line manager which takes priority, and make sure nothing is silently dropped. The key is surfacing the conflict, not making the call alone."
24
A broker contacts you directly asking why their activity was flagged. What do you do?
Situational
Model answer
Professional boundaries. You don't discuss active surveillance with the subject. Politely redirect and escalate.
Answer: "I'd say I'm not able to discuss specific monitoring activity and refer the query to my Compliance Monitoring Officer. Tipping off the subject of a review — even unintentionally — could undermine an investigation and potentially breach our obligations."
25
How would you get up to speed on the products and markets on your desk?
Situational
Model answer
Structured, self-directed learning — they expect you to ramp up on instruments you don't yet know.
Your edge"I'd use the firm's training and onboarding materials, plus external resources — and my CFA Level 1 study already covers a lot of the instrument fundamentals: fixed income, derivatives, equities. I'd aim to understand the economic purpose of each product first, then the mechanics, and I'd document what I learn so I'm not asking the same question twice." The CFA makes this answer genuinely credible.
26
You find a process producing inconsistent outcomes depending on who reviews the alert. What do you do?
Situational
Model answer
Inconsistency in surveillance outcomes is a control risk. Document examples, raise with your manager — don't resolve it unilaterally at L1.
Your edgeThis is literally your day job — documenting where processes are "poorly defined" and inconsistent. "I'd capture specific examples — same alert type, different handling — and present the inconsistency to my CMO so they can decide whether the criteria need clarifying or training is needed. Standardising poorly-defined processes is exactly the work I do now."
Questions to Ask the Interviewers
A1
Is the L1/L2 escalation threshold rules-based, or is there meaningful analyst discretion?
Ask Them
Shows you understand the core mechanic of the job and are thinking about how you'll perform it from day one.
A2
How does the team stay current on new market-abuse typologies — regular briefings or training?
Ask Them
Signals you know market abuse evolves and that you care about development.
A3
How is data and analytics tooling being used in surveillance — and is there scope to contribute to it?
Ask Them
A standout question for you specifically — it surfaces your SQL/Power BI background naturally and signals you want to add value beyond the queue. Likely to spark a good conversation.
A4
Is there a structured pathway from L1 into L2 or other specialist compliance roles?
Ask Them
Ambition and long-term thinking, framed as wanting the full picture of the function.
A5
Does the firm support professional qualifications — and is the CFA seen as relevant for this path?
Ask Them
Naturally surfaces that you're already studying CFA Level 1, signals commitment, and gets you useful information on study support and whether CISI/ICA compliance quals are funded.
A6
What does a strong L1 analyst have demonstrated by the three-month mark?
Ask Them
A strong closer — shows you're focused on performing, not just landing the offer, and tells you exactly what they value.
CV Evidence → Role Requirement

How to use this tab: these are the bridges between Finn's CV and what the role asks for. Have two or three ready as go-to examples — they let you answer almost any behavioural question with real evidence instead of hypotheticals.

Reviewing & verifying records for accuracy
Audit support at McColgans: verified deliveries against purchase orders, prepared and checked inventory records and GRNs for year-end audit, supported external auditors. This is the same "does it match, and if not, why?" discipline that underpins alert triage.
Spotting anomalies / investigating discrepancies
Stock reconciliation: reconciled physical stock with system records and resolved delivery discrepancies across departments. Anomaly detection in a different domain — directly transferable to surveillance.
Following defined controls & maintaining an audit trail
Goods-receipt process & auditor access: provided timely, controlled access to purchase orders, delivery notes and GRNs. Demonstrates respect for process and documentation under scrutiny.
Identifying where processes are poorly defined
Digital Implementation Analyst: value-stream-maps current processes, documents where they break down, and defines the future state. Maps onto alert tuning and flagging surveillance-process inconsistencies.
Data fluency & reporting
SQL, Power BI, SSRS: builds reports with Finance, Supply Chain and HR. Genuine technical depth most entry-level compliance candidates won't have — your angle into the AI/analytics dimension of surveillance.
Financial-markets knowledge & commitment
CFA Level 1 (May 2026) + stated interest in financial markets: covers fixed income, equities and derivatives fundamentals, and proves the career pivot into finance is deliberate and backed by real effort.
Managing competing demands
Part-time work through a full degree; CFA study alongside a full-time role: sustained evidence of prioritising and delivering under genuine competing pressures.
Teamwork & communication
Cross-functional collaboration + club rugby: resolving discrepancies across departments and training staff on new digital tools, plus team leadership on the pitch. Comfortable communicating and working within a team.
Know the Business
The Business

What TP ICAP actually is

TP ICAP is the world's largest interdealer broker (IDB) — market infrastructure connecting major institutional counterparties (banks, hedge funds, central banks, corporates) who want to trade financial instruments that don't have a public exchange. A highly specialised marketplace for the biggest players in finance.

What They Do

Products and markets

Your CFA Level 1 study overlaps directly with several of these — worth mentioning.

Belfast

The Belfast Centre of Excellence

450+ colleagues across Technology, Operations, Finance, HR, Risk and Compliance. Belfast is a strategic hub, not a back office — and a serious financial-markets employer within reach of the north west.

Regulation

Who regulates TP ICAP

Primarily the FCA (Financial Conduct Authority) in the UK, with equivalent regimes elsewhere. Key obligations: UK MAR, MiFID II-equivalent requirements (transaction reporting, best execution, surveillance), and FCA conduct rules.

Key Terms

Vocabulary to know

Finn's Headline Pitch

The one-line story to land

"An analytically-trained engineer who's already moved into data and process work, is studying CFA Level 1, and brings real audit, reconciliation and SQL/Power BI experience — looking to build a compliance career on a proper foundation." It explains the pivot, evidences the skills, and shows commitment in a single breath.

Preparation Tools

⬟ STAR Method Reference

S — Situation

Set the scene briefly — what, where, when. 1–2 sentences max.

T — Task

Your specific responsibility or challenge in that situation.

A — Action

What YOU did. Be specific. "I", not "we". Show the decisions.

R — Result

What happened. Quantify where you can. What you learned.

Time it: 90–120 seconds per answer. Practise aloud, not just in your head.

★ Finn's Three Go-To Stories

Prepare these three in full STAR — they cover most behavioural questions:

Year-end audit support — accuracy under deadline, following controls, verifying records (covers Q06, Q08)
Stock reconciliation discrepancy — spotting an anomaly, investigating, resolving it (covers Q07, anomaly questions)
Learning Power Platform / SQL or CFA alongside work — self-directed learning, juggling demands (covers Q10, Q13)

✓ Pre-Interview Checklist

Re-read the job description; note three phrases to reference back
Rehearse the engineering-to-finance pivot answer until it's fluent and confident
Be able to define: MAR, STOR, MiFID II, layering/spoofing, insider dealing
Be ready to explain an interdealer broker in one clean sentence
Prepare the three go-to STAR stories above
Know your CFA Level 1 progress and which topics it covers (fixed income, equities, derivatives)
Pick 3 questions from "Ask Them" — include the data/analytics one (A3)
Check interview format, location, and who's interviewing
Have a clean LinkedIn and CV copy ready; review the "Your Fit" tab beforehand

✎ Notes