Dense Interconnection Points for Global Financial Markets

By John Knuff.
Common Meeting Places Benefit All Participants
No stranger to turbulent change, the financial services industry continues to face revenue and cost pressures as well as an increased need to operate globally. Exchanges have merged and relocated, new financial centers and trading venues have appeared, and the market share for incumbent players has declined. Established players have been required to adjust both strategically and operationally to survive in this evolving marketplace. As a result, many firms are rethinking their technological infrastructure and evaluating co-located services.

Demand for fast, reliable and cost-effective technology has grown significantly in the last decade. Reliability and throughput are more important than ever before, and firms that were once content to operate their own data centers or co-locate infrastructure with a financial extranet are evaluating their ability to maintain a competitive position at a manageable total cost of ownership. At the same time, the number of options to consider when determining where an order may be best executed has increased.

As a result, the number of required connection points has grown. In this environment, the ability of network-rich data centers to connect to the various execution venues has made their value more apparent. Bringing together network providers, asset managers, brokerages, exchanges and trading platforms as well as market data and analytics providers, these data centers can dramatically lower the number and cost of high-speed interconnections.

Although data centers owned by network providers currently provide a range of co-location services, they have not proven effective in supporting traffic outside their own network. Increasingly, network-neutral data centers are seen as an effective option for firms pursuing global markets across the evolving financial ecosystem.

Trends in capital markets

As 2009 drew to a close, the Aite Group drafted an impact note outlining what it saw as the most significant trends affecting capital markets in 2010. Drivers include:

  • Market fragmentation and increased competition, particularly from multilateral trading facilities (MTFs) in Europe and alternative trading systems in the Canadian and Asia-Pacific markets.
  • Increasing commoditization of high-frequency trading, particularly as independent traders have opened their own trading desks.
  • Developing a global presence and managing global risk. Aite sees the importance of having a global presence as “one of the key issues for sell-side and buy-side firms.”
  • Demand for trading infrastructure innovation, including low latency, throughput and support for multi-asset class trading.

Taken together, these trends underscore the important role that technology vendors will play in supporting participants in the global financial ecosystem. At the same time, those vendors are evolving, and the roles they play are shifting to better serve asset managers, brokerages, and exchanges and trading platforms.

The growth of co-location services

The changes in roles for technology vendors started a decade ago, when financial services firms began looking for opportunities to ensure capacity (headroom), improve connectivity, strengthen business resilience and manage costs.

Financial services firms typically evolve their use of data center vendors in four stages:

  1. Building a data center adjacent to or in a networked building
  2. Co-locating in a phone company data center
  3. Co-locating in a financial extranet data center
  4. Co-locating in a networkrich data center

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