Skip to main content
10/26/13 Firms race to transmit Wall Street data at nearly light speed
Strike Technologies and others are working to build networks of super-fast microwave radio transmitters linking the world's financial hubs. Strike, whose ranks include academics as well as former U.S. and Israeli military engineers, hoisted a 6-foot white dish on a tower rising 280 feet above the Nasdaq Stock Market's data center in Carteret, N.J., just outside New York City. Through a series of microwave towers, the dish beams market data 734 miles to the Chicago Mercantile Exchange's computer warehouse in Aurora, Ill., in 4.13 milliseconds, or about 95% of the theoretical speed of light, according to the company.

DATACENTERS

Is NYSE's NJ Data Center A Game Changer? September 8th, 2009 : Rich Miller
http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2009/09/08/is-nyses-nj-data-center-a-game-changer/

New Jersey is a hotbed of data center infrastructure to support low-latency trading. Providers like Savvis and Equinix have repeatedly expanded their north Jersey colocation hubs to support the booming business in "proximity hosting" providing traders with warp-speed connections to the servers run by major exchanges. One of those exchanges is about to get into the game. Seeking to get a bigger piece of the action, NYSE Euronext is building a 400,000 square foot data center in Mahwah, New Jersey that will offer a large footprint of colo space for low-latency trading operations. The facility is expected to come online sometime in 2010. Analysts and traders alike are wondering whether the new facility will have a disruptive impact on the market for high frequency trading and the lucrative business housing the servers to support it

TOWERS

 

 

The NYSE's Colo Ambitions

The NYSE isn't bashful in talking about its ambitions for its new data center. "When people talk about the New York Stock Exchange, this is it," NYSE Euronext Co-Chief Information Officer Stanley Young told the Wall Street Journal about the new data hub. "This is our future." The Mahwah facility is part of a major data center overhaul for the NYSE, which is building a similar center near London, and continues to maintain centers in New York and Paris. The new facilities will provide the next-generation capabilities that traders crave. "We are approaching our new data center design with fresh thinking and innovative ways to maximize space and cost to deliver the lowest latency and best performance to our customers," said Steve Rubinow, co-Chief Information Officer of NYSE Euronext, who said the new facility will give the NYSE an advantage with "the most obsessive traders." And for the low latency crowd, the obsession is speed, and more of it.
A Need for Speed
The exchange has been working with a number of technology vendors on maximizing the speed of its trading solutions for the new data centers. Two announcements from June reflect that focus:

  • NYSE Technologies and Infiniband networking specialist Voltaire have tested a trading solution that delivers less than 10 microsecond latency at greater than 1 million messages per second. The setup uses NYSE Technologies' Data Fabric high performance middleware, Voltaire's 40 Gb/s InfiniBand switches and messaging software, and servers poweredby the new Intel Xeon 5500 processor.
  • NYSE Euronext and Juniper Networks said they are are working together to design an ultra-low latency core network for NYSE Euronext's new data centers, including an advanced 10 Gigabit Ethernet data center fabric that will support internal latency of 50 microseconds roundtrip. "With Juniper, we are able to dramatically cut the cost and complexity of managing our data center network today, while continuing to enhance our competitive position with a next-generation data center fabric that will enable us to scale to tens of thousands of 10GbE ports," said Rubinow.

The NYSE has also worked with Cisco Systems on an Ethernet-based trading solution using Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA) accelerators to reduce latency within nodes. RDMA allows data to move directly from the memory of one computer into that of another without involving either one's operating system. Cisco's RDMA solution was developed with Wombat Financial, a software unit of NYSE Euronext.
Hiding in Plain Sight
Interest in the new data center has led to an unusual level of awareness about its location. In May we noted a Bergen Record article about the facility, although DCK didn't publish the Mahwah location at that time. Since then the NYSE has provided information about the facility to the Wall Street Journal, which included a photo of the building and a locator map with its story.
The NYSE initiative has securities analysts wondering whether the exchange will win business away from the low latency trading operations of other north Jersey data center players, including the Savvis (SVVS) trading hub in Weehwaken and Equinix's growing presence in Secaucus. "While we recognize there is additional capacity coming in, I think that the overall demand environment is going to continue to drive business for service providers such as ourselves for the foreseeable future," said Phil Koen, CEO of Savvis, in a recent conference call. "We see that as an improving trend." Equinix has emphasized the global nature of its network of financial trading hubs, with additional facilities in Chicago, London, Frankfurt, Hong Kong and Tokyo.

2016 The Case of the Small English Town vs The Large HFT Tower

It’s the story of a very powerful Chicago-based HFT firm, DRW Trading, that tried to sneak a fast one by the small English town of Richborough.   DRW Trading owns a subsidiary called Vigilant Global that is in the business of setting up microwave networks.  As we all know by now, the name of the game in the HFT world is speed.  But another important word is location.  For their high speed microwave networks to be as fast as possible, the HFT firms need to pass the signal through the best possible route.  Sometimes this involves installing microwave units on existing cell towers or on the tops of tall buildings, and sometimes this involves building a new tower altogether for their microwave antennas.
If you want to read more about the story of the Richborough tower, we highly recommend that you read the blog posts titled "HFT in the Banana Land Parts 1-3" by the Sniper in Mahwah.    We first met the Sniper a few years ago at a conference in Brussels and can sense the man had a passion for his work. The level of detail that he goes into in his blog posts about European microwave networks is truly amazing.  The Sniper deserves an enormous amount of credit for his tireless work.