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Posts Tagged ‘algo trading’

High-Frequency Trading Is a Tough Game

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

From Traders Magazine Online News:

Interest in high-frequency trading is at an all-time high, but profit-taking from high-frequency trading strategies focused on low latency is getting tougher.
“The window of opportunity to get into high-frequency trading is almost closed,” said Mark Casey, president of CFN Services, a network provider. He defined high-frequency trading as strategies whose underpinning is low-latency order placement and execution.
“If you’re competing primarily on latency, it’s very, very, very, very difficult,” added Nigel Faulkner, chief technology officer for the equities technology group at Goldman Sachs.
The cost of the technology and infrastucture needed to support high-frequency trading is “tens of millions of dollars” per year, according to Kevin McPartland, a senior analyst at financial services research firm TABB Group. He moderated a panel sponsored by TABB Group and Switch and Data, a data center operator, last Thursday. This article is based on the panel discussion.
Low latency is necessary, McPartland said, to process market data faster than competitors. And high-frequency trading, which encompasses a range of strategies, depends on that data. “It’s like you’re seeing the Wall Street Journal five microseconds into the future,” he said.
High-frequency trading firms must be concerned about latency, but that level of concern should depend on “how much profit they intend to make from every millisecond or microsecond,” Goldman’s Faulkner said. He noted that firms must understand the “value of a micro or milli” for the particular strategy they’re running.
“The infrastucture isn’t the barrier” for firms interested in high-frequency trading, CFN’s Casey told the audience. The barrier is competition. In his view, competing with the most latency-focused firms is a tough, elite game because, at that level, microseconds count. A microsecond is one-millionth of a second, while a millisecond is one-thousandth of a second.
According to a recent TABB report on financial services data centers, the financial services industry spends $1.8 billion for co-location and private facilities to support fast direct access to market centers. Broker-dealers account for half of that sum, or $900 million. Exchanges represent 23 percent, proprietary trading firms 13 percent, asset managers 10 percent and hedge funds 4 percent. That report was published in March, but the figures remain accurate, McPartland said, based on TABB’s ongoing research on data centers and trading, including for an upcoming report on sellside technology focused on U.S. equity infrastructure.
McPartland noted that bulge-bracket firms will often have four or five primary data centers to support their own equities trading and the trading of their clients, and 10 or more co-lo sites in the U.S. All brokers, he said, use co-lo at some level, with many operating in at least two or three co-lo sites.
McPartland added that housing servers within an exchange’s data site is costlier than placing the servers near the facility, such as across the street. The chief features behind a firm’s choice of a data center are cost (which is important to 57 percent of firms), exchange proximity (48 percent), space in the data center to expand (33 percent) and power reliability (29 percent), according to TABB. Additional concerns are service, security, control and network neutrality.
CFN’s Casey said that “proximity trading” has exploded over the last couple of years. Proximity trading refers to strategies that depend on low latency by installing computer servers near a market center’s matching engine.
One of the changes in the marketplace in recent years that has fueled high-frequency trading was regulation. In 2007, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Regulation NMS went into effect. Reg NMS lay down a set of rules to modernize the markets, but it also made the landscape more fertile for high-frequency trading firms. Casey noted that execution strategies that used to be implemented just on Nasdaq, for instance, have given way to more inter-market trading strategies.
But regulation wasn’t the only significant change. The TABB study found that the “game-changing technology” that spurred the growth of high-frequency trading was bandwidth availability and the relative low cost of buying bandwidth. “That’s what is letting equities volume be eight-to-nine billion shares per day,” McPartland said.
Several panelists pointed out that while speed is vital, not all high-frequency trading depends on extreme low-latency. Nor is all low-latency trading high-frequency, CFN’s Casey said. Still, Goldman’s Faulkner observed that “if it’s high-enough frequency, it must be low latency.” He added that “we increasingly see that the benchmark [for high-frequency trading firms] is low latency.”
As more firms now get into high-frequency trading, their infrastructure development has taken different paths. George Hessler, executive vice president at Lime Brokerage, said he thinks the balance for many firms is tipping toward renting components of the technology and infrastructure, rather than building them from scratch. He added that as consolidation takes place in this part of the trading-services industry, the hardware and software services are improving dramatically. Lime services many high-frequency trading clients.
Goldman’s Faulkner, however, said that it would be hard for a truly latency-sensitive firm to be satisfied with vendor products. For big banks, he added, servicing these firms has also become more complex because their needs are different from the traditional needs of high-volume clients. “We’re having to change the mix of our application developers,” he said.
Firms that are really latency-sensitive must pull out all the stops to account for every microsecond, since that affects their profitability. They must “account for the last 100 microseconds they can’t find,” and be able to figure out if the latency is in the code, switches, applications or elsewhere, Faulkner said.
UBS has a “strong bias” to build rather than rent the various components necessary to support high-frequency-trading firms, according to Josh Schubkegel, executive director for client-facing technology at the big bank. He noted that some clients want to get “close to the metal” and do everything themselves, while others do not.
Schubkegel noted that the focus on serving high-frequency firms has also benefited other clients at some of the big banks. UBS, he said, has leveraged some of the technology platforms developed for high-frequency traders for its direct market access and algorithmic trading business.

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Expections are high for the Low Latency Networking Solutions

Sunday, October 4th, 2009
Optimizing the Power of your Network

Optimizing the Power of your Network

Electronic Trading Firms are expecting a lot more from their network providers when it comes to low latency. It is a well-known fact, that faster is better when it comes to many things in the world. In the Electronic Trading industry being first in the queue is not just better, it can mean millions of dollars uplift. When millions are at stake, every aspect of the equation needs to be evaluated. CFN Services is now providing Electronic Traders a new aspect to their low latency goal. In the race to Alpha, there is a new variable in the mix.  Learn More

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WSTA Resource Guide

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

WSTA Resource Guide: CFN Services

CFN Services is a managed infrastructure services company providing network services for the Financial Markets, specializing in network design, planning, deployment, and managed services, for ultra- low latency networking. CFN Services leverages FiberSource®, a global knowledge-based platform that identifies all available dark and lit fiber, collocation, and lit buildings; providing the ability to quickly identify and design optimal ultra-low latency solutions.

Contact Information:
www.cfnservices.com
Judy May
lowlatency@cfnservices.com
703.788.6534
2325 Dulles Corner Blvd 5th Fl
Herndon, VA 20171

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Fiber Characteristics that Affect Latency

Friday, August 21st, 2009

cfn_blue_dot

Ensure you have all the facts before you make a choice between Dark and Lit Fiber.

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TMC Interview with Mark Casey, CFN Services

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

TMC NewsroomCFN Services discusses the electronic trading space in reference to low latency networking. CFN Services is the leader in the low latency network space. CFN Services has changed the low latency market by introducing: Performance Level SLA, Latency Improvement Plans, Custom Fiber Network Solutions and FiberSource Advisor Professional Services. http://www.tmcnet.com/tmc/videos/default.aspx?vid=1243

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Schumer Calls For Crackdown On ‘Flash’ Trading

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

The Securities and Exchange Commission may crack down on a controversial practice that has caught on at various U.S. stock market centers, including Nasdaq, Bats Exchange and Direct Edge, that gives some traders privileged access to key market information.

In a letter fired off Friday, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) asked that the SEC ban so-called flash order types, which route stock pricing information for a brief period of time away from the displayed market centers, where all investors can see current orders and prices, and shows it to a limited group of member traders who can then decide whether to fill an order before it is routed out to another market.

The issue has been one of increasing controversy on Wall Street. Flash quotes fly in the face of four-year old rules that were supposed to level the playing field for all investors and make pricing information more accessible. Yet until now the SEC has allowed the three market centers to proceed.

Regulation National Market System required that orders be filled at the best price at any given time regardless of where that price was located. So if Nasdaq did not display the best price for a given stock as the order came in but Bats did, Nasdaq would have to route the order to Bats.

The flash quote programs hold up that process by displaying orders to members for as much as 500 milliseconds–an eternity in electronic trading–before routing out. Some say that gives traders with access to the flash quotes an advantage in that they can fill an order for a lower cost than it may be once it gets routed back out to another market.

Given the explosion in market volumes in the last year, and the fractionalization of the markets caused by Regulation NMS, the major stock trading venues have an incentive to try to fill orders in-house without routing out to rival centers. Direct Edge, an electronic communications network backed by Goldman Sachs ( GS news people ), Citadel and Knight Trading, was the first to offer such an order type to its members and recently has used it to great success in siphoning market volume away from NYSE, Bats and Nasdaq.

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Credit Suisse, NSX, Currenex Describe Low Latency Projects

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

From Wall Street and Technology:

At a well-attended low-latency trading event today at Credit Suisse’s Flatiron district office, hosted by 29West, Wall Street executives noted that their focus on lowering data latency in their trading environments has not softened, despite the economic climate, and shared some of their latest efforts to reduce latency further.

For Credit Suisse, and especially for its CrossFinder dark pool, “Latency is our differentiator,” says Alex Roitgarts, director at the firm and the person responsible for latency. “Latency is a barrier to trading strategies. As a result, the key differentiator is how fast you can process and how much volume you can process. Logically, you don’t have to be zero latency, you just have to be faster than the other guy. Since you don’t know what the other guy is doing, you need to tune your operation like a Swiss watch every single day.” Even customers who don’t express any direct interest in latency are concerned about the performance of their trading algorithms. “The algo itself is becoming latency sensitive,” he says.

While two to three years ago latency was measured in the tens of milliseconds, today Credit Suisse’s round-trip trade order latency is within 300-350 microseconds. “I wouldn’t be surprised if within a few years people start measuring latency in nanoseconds,” Roitgarts says.

To reduce latency, the Swiss firm is installing new, faster network routers that will cause only three microseconds latency, versus 20 microseconds for the current technology. It closely monitors its trading applications by putting time stamps within trade messages and watching performance against certain thresholds. The firm doesn’t try to measure latency on every trade, though. “We try to take a top down, practical approach,” Roitgarts says. “If you try to measure latency on every signal that happens, the process of measurement may slow you down.” Instead Credit Suisse looks at logical check points. As soon as a lag is detected, “we immediately try to figure out why it happened,” he says. If nothing seems amiss with the application, the routers and network appliances are investigated.

At the National Stock Exchange, CIO Saro Jahani tries to take a holistic approach to latency. “We have to make sure that not only our matching engines, FIX engines and network are fast enough, good enough, and stable and controlled enough, we also have to make sure we have policies in place that help our clients to do smart colocations,” he says. “I have assigned a team of people within my organization to to make the system as low stress and low latency as possible.” Many times, customers’ latency is actually caused by their firewalls and workload balancers, he says.

Sean Gilman, CTO of foreign exchange ECN Currenex, points out that what his organization offers is a “fungible asset” — clients can trade wherever they want to. “When they come to us, they expect to get the price and market data first and to be able to hit that price first and faster than their competitors.” For instance, Currenex had a hedge fund client performing arbitrage based on trading models that frequently complained it was losing money because it was putting in orders that weren’t getting filled. “We found that another customer was hitting that same price, each time. The models are the same between these different hedge funds, but one was faster by one millisecond or a few microseconds. It doesn’t matter what the granularity is, you’re fastest or you lose. It really is a race.”

To keep up, Currenex upgrades its core servers every 16 months and its network every two years. The exchange also separates simple orders from complex ones, which are handled on a separate matching engine, allowing the common orders fast throughput.

For latency monitoring, Currenex finds SNMP [Simple Network Management Protocol] useful for basic devices such as routers and switches and boxes. “But the real problems tend not to be there,” Gilman notes. “That’s not usually the type of thing that bites us.” Instead, the forex venue focuses on applicational latencies between different services, storing statistics and charting trends to detect possible causes of latency, such as a code change.

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BATS Will Launch into Options Market

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

A year after becoming an equities exchange, BATS plans to grab a
chunk of the options market through aggressive pricing that appeals to
some of the same automated liquidity-providing firms that helped make
it the third-largest exchange operator in U.S. equities.

“Compared
to our competitors in this space, we’re lean, based on our direct
monthly expenses and capital outlay to get into options, so we’re
operating on a different scale than other exchanges,” said Joe
Ratterman, CEO of BATS Exchange. “Because of that, we can be
aggressively priced.”

BATS Options will have maker-taker
pricing in a price-time market model. The exchange hasn’t yet announced
its pricing, but will target all options classes, and not just those
quoted in penny increments, Ratterman said. He does not think the
exchange will offer different pricing for penny-quoted and
non-penny-quoted options, but noted that the final decision hasn’t yet
been made. In equities BATS has sometimes used inverted maker-taker
pricing to attract volume.

“If history is any guide, they’re
very aggressive with their pricing metrics, and will enter the options
space with a pricing structure that will undercut the competition and
will attract interest and competition from trading entities,” said Andy
Nybo, a principal at research firm TABB Group.

BATS’s
ambitions for options are aggressive. “We wouldn’t be going into this
market if there wasn’t a big opportunity for BATS to come in, make
improvements and gain market share,” Ratterman said. “U.S. equities was
one of the most competitive markets in the world and we managed to do
very well when we broke into that space. There’s nothing to keep us
from being successful in options.”

Ratterman expects BATS’s
eventual options market share to equal its share in equities. In June,
BATS accounted for 10.7 percent of equities volume. BATS, formerly an
ECN, opened for trading in January 2006 and became an exchange in
August 2008.

BATS intends to build its options market by
appealing to a range of investors, including institutions, retail
brokers and market-making firms. “We’ll attract as much diversity [of
flow] as possible,” Ratterman said. “We have a fair and open model in
the equities world and will have that in options.”

But the
exchange’s strong suit is its appeal to automated market makers. “The
performance metrics of our system have traditionally appealed to
automated market-making firms because of the low-risk characteristics
of their trading on our markets, and the consistency and performance of
our system,” Ratterman said. “It’s likely we’ll have as much influence
on the options side.”

TABB’s Nybo notes that BATS’s reputation
for having a strong technology platform and low-latency infrastructure
will boost its prospects in options. “They are looking to attract
quantitative trading firms using low-latency, high-frequency strategies
and those that arbitrage fleeting price discrepancies,” he said.

BATS
will file the rule set for its new market “shortly,” according to
Ratterman. He said the launch of BATS Options is targeted for January
or February of next year, subject to approval by the Securities and
Exchange Commission.

BATS Options will join a growing
marketplace populated by seven options exchanges. Last month, 296
million equity options contracts changed hands, up 5.6 percent over the
previous June’s volume. The industry traded a record 3.3 billion equity
options contracts in 2008, an increase of 26.7 percent over 2007’s
record volume. This year is on pace to exceed last year’s volume.

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7.99ms Chicago to NJ Financial District

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

What 7.99ms how is that possible?? By utilizing optimal spans from available carriers CFN Services is able to create the lowest latency solution from 350 Cermak to 1400 Federal. Not only does this low latency exist, it is guaranteed. Limited Availability so inquire immediately. www.cfnservices.com/electronic_trading.asp

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CFN Services Announces FiberSource® Advisor for Trading Firms

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Herndon, VA (PRWeb) June 25, 2009, 2009 No longer can a trader meet their low latency requirements by just collocating in the same facility as the exchanges. The exchanges are spread out now, and so is the market data essential to successful execution of trading strategies. Traders need to find the optimal combination of space and network configuration that is central to the market data feeds and the exchanges they are trading on. That is why CFN Services is extending FiberSource Advisor® to include a Financial Services specific practice. Working with CFN Services FiberSource Advisor® to help meet low latency requirements allows Trading Firms the ability to focus resources on the trading environment, platform, messaging, algorithms and other essential key areas.  FiberSource Advisor® provides the trading firm a roadmap to optimize their network; helping plan and configure the optimal collocation sites, lowest latency networking solutions, and peace of mind achieved with full disclosure of all options available.
CFN Services is a leading ultra low latency and custom fiber optic network integrator in the financial industry; offering specific Ultra Low Latency solutions for the trading areas in a growing number of financial centers globally including Toronto, Chicago, New York/New Jersey Metro, Washington, DC, London, and Frankfurt.  CFN Services sets themselves apart from other transport vendors by offering: carrier neutrality, FiberSource Advisor® professional services, fully managed services, and the ability to design custom fiber networks.
CFN Services specializes in designing, implementing and managing high performance, low latency fiber networks. CFN is a custom fiber network provider, not simply a supplier of circuits. This is a unique advantage to a trading firm, because CFN and their FiberSource Advisor® professional services, can assist in the overall plan and development of the financial network to ensure optimization based on each firm’s unique priorities for market data delivery, trade execution, clearing data, and internal IT operations. CFN Service’s FiberSource Advisor® offering provides sophisticated financial trading firms with multiple network configuration options that fully leverage their existing network investments while providing a growth path and simultaneously lowering latency.
As a spin off of CSX Corporation, CFN Services carries on a 20-year legacy in fiber network deployment and management. CFN Services’ proprietary FiberSource® knowledge-based platform delivers access to over 500 carrier networks globally including more than 100 submarine systems; providing direct visibility into all available dark and lit fiber options, collocation facilities, and metro fiber rings for optimal deployment to any global financial center worldwide. Through FiberSource Advisor® CFN Services’ combines its vast telecom knowledge base with extensive experience in lit and dark fiber network design and implementation to provide trading firms with an edge on all aspects of MAN and WAN network deployment. CFN’s engineers articulate and provide recommendations on optimal transport architectures across technologies including WDM, SONET, Ethernet, IP, and MPLS.  FiberSource Advisor® will help traders lower latency on their existing routes, while optimizing the overall transport network inclusive of future growth plans.
As David Conrad, VP of Sales at CFN Services has observed, “ Partnering with CFN Services and utilizing FiberSource Advisor® provides trading firms the confidence and assurance that they are getting the best network solutions to meet their unique needs. With a view to all available fiber, including that of Utilities, Carriers and Dark Fiber providers; we enable our clients to rapidly sift through a typically daunting array of network options and providers to get to the optimal solution based on their specific requirements. Working with CFN as an integrator ensures carrier neutrality and eliminates the typical network operator’s bias for their own, often sub-optimal, end-to-end solutions.”
For more information about CFN Services and FiberSource Advisor® www.cfnservices.com

About CFN Services
CFN Services is a managed telecom infrastructure services company providing network services for the Enterprise, Public Sector and Carrier Markets. Specializing in network planning, deployment, and managed services, including local access transport, low latency networking, and mobile backhaul optimization, CFN Services leverages the company’s flagship FiberSource® network planning and optimization platform. CFN Services has provided network planning and deployment services to some of the leading wireless and wireline network operators including Verizon, AT&T, Level 3 and Sprint.  For more information please see http://www.cfnservices.com.
Contact: Judy May  – 703-788-6633; Judy.May@cfnservices.com

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