Horizon Assset Investments: Front-End Developer (Full-Time, Remote)
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This is a full-time, remote Front-End Developer position at Horizon Asset Investments. It offers the opportunity to work within the financial technology sector in a flexible, distributed work environment.
Job Description
Headquarters: Remote URL: https://www.horizonassetinvestments.com/ Front-End Developer (Full-Time, Remote) We ar
Full Description
Headquarters: Remote URL: https://www.horizonassetinvestments.com/ Front-End Developer (Full-Time, Remote) We are seeking a Front-End Developer to design and build the user-facing components of our high-performance trading platform. You will play a key role in creating intuitive, data-rich interfaces that enable traders and analysts to work efficiently and effectively. You will collaborate closely with the Back-End Development Team and the Project Manager to deliver seamless, integrated systems. A key factor is the front end developer’s ability to deeply discuss approaches, trade-offs, limitations, and pros/cons with the development team, rather than reliance on any specific pattern or library. Key Responsibilities Develop and maintain the front-end applications of our trading platform. Collaborate with back-end developers and the project manager to ensure smooth integration across systems. Design and implement multi-page layouts, menus, and workflows that balance usability with efficiency. Contribute to the design and user experience of the trading platform, performance & risk manager, and backtesting engine. Implement and optimize charting and data visualization features, leveraging libraries such as TradingView or D3.js to support a wide variety of chart types (tables, multi-line chart packs, etc.). Continuously refine the UI/UX to ensure clarity, speed, and intuitive navigation for end users. Qualifications Strong communication skills and the ability to collaborate effectively with developers, project managers, and business stakeholders. A keen eye for design, simplicity, and efficiency, with the ability to translate complex requirements into clean, user-friendly interfaces. Knowledge of financial systems or trading concepts is preferred. Core stack (mandatory) React 18 + Next.js (App Router), TypeScript, TailwindCSS. Strong command of state management for high-frequency data (e.g., Zustand, Redux Toolkit, useSyncExternalStore). Real-time data & performance Hands-on with WebSockets / SSE and reconnection/backoff strategies; handling authenticated socket connections and topic resubscriptions. Experience implementing backpressure, buffering, coalescing, and windowing to prevent UI thrash under thousands of updates/minute. Data virtualization (react-virtualized, react-window) for large tables (orders, positions, trades). Familiar with Web Workers / OffscreenCanvas and message passing to keep the main thread responsive. Awareness of latency budgets and frame-time profiling using React DevTools and browser performance tools. Charting & visualization Practical experience with professional charting libs (e.g., TradingView Charting Library, Lightweight Charts, Highcharts, D3). Real-time overlays: best bid/ask, order book depth, last OHLCV, order/position annotations. Multi-pane layouts (price, volume, indicators) with synchronized crosshairs and time scales. Architecture & data access Client-side caching and invalidation (e.g., TanStack Query / React Query). Schema-driven UI for instruments and venues. Use of Error Boundaries, Suspense, and progressive hydration/streaming for large Next.js pages. Auth, security, and roles Strong understanding of OIDC/JWT flows, token refresh/rotation, and WebSocket authentication. Role-based feature gating (read-only vs trading permissions). Testing, quality, and reliability Unit tests for critical transforms/parsers (e.g., Playwright/Vitest for E2E/interaction flows) Experience with feature flags, staged rollouts, and monitoring with Sentry/OpenTelemetry. Nice-to-haves Experience with desktop-class layouts (drag-to-dock panels, resizable grids). Exposure to WASM for heavy computations (e.g., indicator calculations). Familiarity with FIX/crypto venue nuances (tick sizes, lot sizes, trading sessions). Screening QuestionsKeep answers 4–8 sentences each. Bullet points allowed if clear. 1) UI migration (hrzk → Next.js): Pick ONE area from the provided hrzk.html (e.g., Orders+Trades, Positions table, Equity/Drawdown). Explain how you’d migrate it to React 18 + Next.js (App Router) + TypeScript + Tailwind. Include folder structure and what you’d make client vs server components. (We care about your trade-offs, not “the one true way”.) 2) Real-time data ingestion: Describe how you’d handle WebSockets/SSE for high-frequency updates: reconnect/backoff, authenticated sockets, and topic resubscriptions. What failures do you expect in production? 3) Backpressure + UI thrash prevention: Assume thousands of updates/minute for orders/positions/trades. Explain how you’d implement buffering/coalescing/windowing so the UI stays responsive. Mention how you’d combine this with state management (e.g., Zustand/RTK/useSyncExternalStore) and virtualization (react-window / react-virtualized). What would you measure to prove it works? 4) Charting approach: We need fast, readable, data-rich charts (equity/drawdown, doughnut/bars, etc.). Pick a chart type from hrzk.html and explain: - which charting library you’d choose (TradingView Lightweight Charts / Highcharts / D3 / etc.) - update frequency strategy - performance risks + mitigations 5) Auth + role gating: Explain how you’d handle JWT/OIDC token refresh and WebSocket authentication, then implement role-based gating (read-only vs trading). Use an example like “Cancel All Orders” or “Stop/Start Execution”: when do you hide vs disable vs show a warning? 6) Remote ownership + teamwork: Give one example where you took ownership remotely on an ambiguous task. Then describe how you’d work with a small dev team: how you ask clarifying questions, communicate risk early, and avoid shipping “local optimum” code that breaks other parts of the system. What to expect (our interview process): Our hiring process is mostly async and focused on real work.You’ll start with a CV submission and a short, structured application.Shortlisted candidates complete an async technical screen.Finalists complete a paid, time‑boxed work sample aligned to the role.End‑to‑end, the process typically runs 4–6 weeks. FAQs · Do I need to respond to the questions? Yes, please respond to the questions ideally in an open format via a cover letter. This is mandatory for vetting. · Do I need to attend live interviews?Most stages are async to reduce scheduling friction. Live calls are minimal. · Do I need to be on camera for the sample work?No — screen + voice is sufficient. · What tools can I use to submit recordings?Any common screen‑recording or file‑sharing tool is fine, as long as the video is easy to view. · Is the final task paid?Yes. Final shortlisted candidates complete a paid, time‑boxed work sample. To apply: https://weworkremotely.com/remote-jobs/horizon-assset-investments-front-end-developer-full-time-remote