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Posts Tagged ‘Fiber Networks’

CFN Rolls Out Chicago – New York 16.6ms Roundtrip

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

CFN Services has launched a low latency network service from Chicago to New York. The new service offers customers secure low latency connectivity between data centres at 350 East Cermak Road in Chicago and 60 Hudson Street, NYC; 275 Hartz Way, Secaucus, NJ; and 300 Boulevard East, Weehawken, NJ; establishing direct connections to increasingly fragmented sources of liquidity and market data.

“Latency in the network is becoming a key variable for traders to differentiate themselves. Securing an Ultra Low Latency connection between Chicago and New York is providing many traders an opportunity to lower their existing latency on this route” states Wil Tirado, VP Engineering at CFN Services. “Working with an integrator such as CFN Services, trading firms have the option to customize their network design to provide competitive advantages. CFN Services also provides our clients with the option of an individualised lower latency migration plan ensuring they are continually decreasing their latency. No Service Provider offers such a guarantee.”

CFN Services has built a low latency fibre network by identifying and utilising optimal spans from all available carriers. With its FiberSource design platform, it is able to access over 500 carrier networks globally.

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CFN Services Expands Network with Telx

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Offer Telx customers In New York and Chicago a complete, low-latency financial networking solution

Key Highlights:

  • New relationship joins CFN Services’ low latency network with Telx’s proximity hosting advantages.
  • CFN’s ultra low latency solution guarantees a round-trip connection between Telx’s NY metro and Chicago facilities that is at or below 16.6 milliseconds.
  • Telx customers gain direct access to a leading network integrator and design firm serving the financial services industry.
  • A common carrier-neutral stance provides CFN and Telx customers with optimal solutions.

NEW YORK and CHICAGO (May 27, 2009) –  Telx, one of the largest and fastest growing domestic interconnection and colocation data center operators, announced today that custom network provider CFN Services has added network nodes for its ultra low latency financial network in Telx facilities at 60 Hudson Street and 111 8th Avenue in New York City as well as in 600 South Federal Street in Chicago. These new nodes allow Telx Financial Exchange customers colocated in New York, New Jersey, and Chicago – including Telx customers colocated in the company’s facility at 350 East Cermak Street – access to CFN’s ultra low latency network, which guarantees speeds of 16.6 milliseconds or better.

The addition of CFN into Telx facilities helps Telx customers gain an optimized network configuration to ensure the ultra low latency for all pieces of the trading process from market data feeds, ticker plants, exchanges and other key trading platforms. These services can provide the competitive advantage that financial companies need to gain an edge in today’s market. CFN Services will also work to implement a customized plan to ensure that the network configurations are optimal based on each customer’s individual criteria.

“In the current market, financial services companies need every advantage available to thrive,” says Eric Shepcaro, CEO of Telx. “The suite of financial service providers and ultra low latency networks, such as those offered by CFN, are critical to our customers’ success. Telx remains committed to seeking out service providers who can help our customers realize their full business potential.”

In addition, the carrier-neutral stance adopted by both Telx and CFN provides added advantage for customers: by bringing a wide variety of service providers to the table to compete for your business, Telx helps customers get the lowest available service price with high-quality proximity hosting; while CFN creates custom networks utilizing optimal spans from available routes based on the customer requirements regarding latency, price, optimization, performance, and time to install.

“In addition to ultra low latency networking, CFN offers unique, performance-level SLAs that guarantee a specific latency today and network improvements that guarantee latency improvements over time,” said Wil Tirado Vice President of Engineering for CFN. “When obtained from within a Telx colocation facility, customers are assured a long-range business plan for growth that accommodates both current and future needs for decreased latency and increase space, power, and cooling over time.”

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About Telx
Telx is a world-class leader in providing interconnectivity solutions through their network-neutral and network rich, colocation facilities.  With over a dozen facilities in North America, Telx offers cost effective networking solutions for customers to seamlessly access diverse global networks and exchange information in a secure and reliable environment.   Over 600 leading telecommunications carriers, ISPs, content providers and enterprises rely on Telx’s world-class team to support their mission-critical global infrastructure needs and to create a global connectivity marketplace to dramatically expand their business growth opportunities.  Telx is a privately held company headquartered in New York City with facilities in New York, Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Santa Clara, Miami, Phoenix, Charlotte, as well as Weehawken and Clifton, N.J. For more information about Telx, visit www.telx.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, visit www.cfnservices.com.

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Smart Proximity Hosting

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Proximity Hosting Can Only take you Half Way There

Zero latency is the optimal trading speed that all firms hope to achieve at some point. But until that can become a reality, there is a race to keep reducing latency from all aspects of the trading process. From the server to the messaging to the sending and receiving of data, each piece must be optimized to reach the goal of zero latency.  There are many avenues companies are looking at to reduce variables and risk to latency – one of those is proximity hosting.

There are data centers where the trader can actually collocate with the exchanges. For example, in Weehawken, NJ there is a data center that houses five major exchanges including: the American Stock Exchange, Philadelphia Stock Exchange, and BATS Trading. This is a way to ensure there is almost zero latency built into the trade to those exchanges. But it is not the complete puzzle. Even with proximity hosting to collocate within a data center that houses exchanges there are still external servers that play a role in the execution of the trade. These are the data feeds, the platforms, your proprietary content, and the messaging. Even the data centers that host the exchange as a simple cross connect, are rarely the only exchange a firm is trading on. So how do you close the gap?

While a firm may be trading a particular asset class and the majority of trades may be directed toward a single venue, the volumes and price-points on related exchanges play critical roles in execution decisions.  This means latency must be minimized from all data sources, not just the venue the majority of trades are placed on.  For instance, having the lowest latency on venue A, but being significantly behind the market on venue B or C could have disastrous impact on success of a trade decision.  It’s important then, to reach a delicate balance between the lowest latencies on all data sources and execution venues.

Where milliseconds and microseconds make a difference to the success of a trade strategy, the idea of Central Proximity hosting is to find locations that are central to most of the destination you need to access. There are a number of hosting locations within the NJ/NY trading area: Clifton, North Bergen, and Weehawken, NJ just to name a few that provide central proximity hosting. Central Proximity Hosting enables firms to locate within a few miles of all the locations and data a trade strategy needs for successful execution.  So that makes up half of the picture – how do you complete the race to speed-of-light transport?

The network provider does the rest. A Carrier is a good solution for the transport of data when latency and performance are important, but not critical. When latency reaches a level that’s critical to your success and your strategic advantage, you need a more agnostic approach to finding the best network. In working with each Carrier, they will provide you their “on net” best solutions between locations. This approach is not always the best solution for your specific needs. And it’s here that a network integrator offers you a measurable advantage comes into play.

The network provider that you partner with must be able to provide the lowest latency solutions for the metro ring and the longhaul. The network integrator you work with should be Carrier Agnostic, to ensure you are getting the optimal solution for your needs and not a solution based on the relationship an integrator has with a Carrier.   Some integrators, like CFN Services, can even go a step further. Beyond optimal solution recommendations for your specific strategy and requirements, they can also create new routes specific to your priorities. An integrator like CFN Services can actually utilize optimal spans of available fiber to create new fiber routes that do not exist along any single Carrier.

In the race to Alpha, the combination of Central Proximity Hosting coupled with the Low Latency Transport is key to your success.

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Nasdaq dark pool unveils new features

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

NEURO Dark, a new European dark pool to be launched on 11 May by multilateral trading facility Nasdaq OMX Europe, will offer IOI functionality, smart routing and new ‘internalisation’ order types.

Users of NEURO Dark’s smart order routing functionality, which sends any orders not filled in the pool to other non-displayed venues, will also be able to interact with indications of interest (IOIs) sent to the platform by its routing partners.

“The IOIs will contain rudimentary information on stock and side, and our routing partners will only be able to send us IOIs that can be executed against,” Todd Golub, executive director of European markets development, Nasdaq OMX Europe, told theTRADEnews.com.”

Owned by global exchange group Nasdaq OMX, NEURO Dark will offer smart order routing after its initial launch to both independent dark pools and brokers’ internal crossing engines. Routing to displayed venues is not planned until further clarification of dark-lit venue interaction from regulators.

NEURO Dark will also offer an internalised order type called SELF, which is designed for market participants that do not have their own internalisation processes. This will allow users to match orders against their own internal flow within NEURO Dark, and gives them the option to match against their own flow before opening orders up to liquidity from other clients on the platform.

“With the current focus on cost-cutting, people can use a proven platform to perform the internalisation function,” said Golub. “We are planning to integrate this with the routing service in the future.”

The charge for trades completed using the SELF order type will be 0.05 basis points per side. All other executions will be charged at 0.1bps. By comparison, Chi-Delta, the dark pool offering from rival MTF Chi-X Europe due to launch in Q2, will charge 0.3bps per execution.

NEURO Dark will run independently from the Nasdaq OMX Europe and will trade around 800 of the most actively traded European blue-chip stocks. Like its lit counterpart, it will be powered by INET technology.

The platform will use the reference price pre-trade transparency waiver under MiFID to exempt it from publishing bids and offers. Under this waiver, prices in the pool are pegged to the mid-point price of a “widely published and reliable source” – typically the prices on the relevant primary exchange. Using this waiver allows NEURO Dark to accept dark orders of any size, unlike the large-in-scale waiver, which requires orders in the pool to be a specific size relative to the stock’s average daily turnover and market capitalisation.

The arrival of NEURO Dark comes at a time of heightened activity in the European dark pool market. As well as the imminent arrival of Chi-Delta, NYSE Euronext launched its SmartPool dark MTF in February, while Baikal, the London Stock Exchange’s non-displayed trading platform, is set to start trading in June.

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Proximity Hosting Can Only take you Half Way There

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Zero latency is the optimal trading speed that all firms hope to achieve at some point. But until that can become a reality, there is a race to keep reducing latency from all aspects of the trading process. From the server to the messaging to the sending and receiving of data, each piece must be optimized to reach the goal of zero latency.  There are many avenues companies are looking to reduce variables and risk to latency – one of those is proximity hosting.

There are data centers where the trader can actually collocate with the exchanges. For example, in Weehawken, NJ there is a data center that houses five major exchanges including: the American Stock Exchange, Philadelphia Stock Exchange, and BATS Trading. This is a way to ensure there is almost zero latency built into the trade to those exchanges. But it is not the complete puzzle. Even with proximity hosting to collocate within a data center that houses exchanges there are still external servers that play a role in the execution of the trade. These are the data feeds, the platforms and the messaging. Even the data centers that host the exchange as just a cross connect, rarely are they the only exchange a firm is trading on. So how do you close the gap?

The idea of Central Proximity hosting is to find locations that are center to most of the locations you need to access. There are many hosting locations within the NJ/NY trading area: Clifton, North Bergen, and Weehawken, NJ just to name a few that provide central proximity hosting. Central Proximity Hosting is getting within a few miles of all the locations a trade needs to execute.  So that makes up half of the picture – how do you complete the race to speed of light transport?

The network provider does the rest. A Carrier is a good solution for the transport of data when latency and performance are important but not critical. When latency reaches the level of critical you need a more agnostic approach to finding the best network. In working with each Carrier, they will provide you their “on net” best solutions between locations. That is not always the best solution for your specific needs. This is where a network integrator comes into play.

The network provider that you partner with must be able to provide the lowest latency solutions for the metro ring and the longhaul. The network integrator you work with should be Carrier Agnostic, to ensure you are getting the optimal solution for your needs and not a solution based on the relationship an integrator has with a Carrier.   Some integrators, like CFN Services, can even go a step further. They not only can make recommendations as to the optimal solutions for your needs, but they can create new routes specific to your priorities. An integrator like CFN Services can actually utilize optimal spans of available fiber to create new fiber routes that do not exist along any single Carrier.

In the race to Alpha, the combination of Central Proximity Hosting coupled with the Low Latency Transport is key to your success.

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Telx Ribbon Cutting in Clifton, NJ

Monday, April 27th, 2009

CFN Services was pleased to particiate in Telx’s opening of their new Data Center location in Clifton, NJThe event took place April 23rd. The new facility in Clifton is the latest of Telx’ 15 network-neutral and network-rich colocation facilities designed to not only reduce costs for customers by enabling them to connect to one another, but also to even drive revenue for them through these connections. It also addresses the growing trend of businesses looking for a secure location for not only their communications hardware, but their entire IT infrastructure.

CFN Services, sees this location as a strategic way to support the growing Electronic Trading Enterprise firms in the NY/NJ metro. By adding more NJ locations it allows traders the ability to move their traffic to many of the NJ based exchanges without transversing into Manhattan. This also provides diversity and optimization for some of the exchange trades that occur on the other side of the Hudson.  Like Telx, CFN Services is Carrier Agnostic, this allows us to provide the best and lowest latency transport solutions available. CFN Services is able to provide the lowest latency because we can work with multiple Carriers to interconnect the optimal spans of fiber to provide a single fully managed end to end Network.

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A-Team Group Launches 2009 Algorithmic Trading Directory

Monday, April 27th, 2009

The A-Team Algorithmic Trading Directory – 2009 Edition is now available for download–with updated information and more profiles. The Algorithmic Trading Directory is the industry’s only reference for professionals active in the algorithmic and electronic trading community. The directory provides an easy-to-use guide to help buy-side professionals understand the algorithms on offer from their brokers and other trading counterparties and suppliers, where to find them, and who to talk with about them.

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This is proving to be a banner year….

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–This is proving to be a banner year for volumes among foreign exchange retail investors, even as institutional traders say 2009 will pale in comparison to the striking growth seen in 2008 and 2007.

Volumes on dbFX, the online retail trading platform from Deutsche Bank, increased 37% in the first quarter of 2009 from the same period a year earlier. Compared to the fourth quarter of 2008, volumes jumped 4% in the most recent period. The latter rise was particularly impressive given sharp volume gains in October, at the height of market fears, when retail investor interest spiked due to intensified volatility.

Other retail platforms have anecdotal revealed the same trend, from big Citigroup to the smaller Global Forex Trading. Increasingly, investors are taking advantage of financial market instability through currency trading, although many warn that the market is too volatile for most non-professional traders.

“More and more people are leaving the equities market and coming into foreign exchange, as foreign exchange is a non-correlated asset over the long term,” said Betsy Waters, global director of dbFX.com.

Euros, dollars, pounds, Turkish lira – none rise and fall alone. Their values fluctuate in reference to another currency. This means no matter what is going on in equities or commodities markets, traders can make a buck by betting on some currency out there. This is especially worthwhile to investors in countries that forbid betting against an asset.

This has proven useful in a year when investors have to maneuver around falling commodities and stocks, and may be searching to diversify.

But part of the rise in retail volumes is also attributable to the fact this sector is relatively new. dbFX itself launched in June 2006. Volumes on dbFX between 2007 and 2008 increased by two-and-a-half times, according to Waters.

On the institutional side, analysts have said it will be hard for foreign exchange teams to compete in 2009 with the volumes they grossed in the previous years.

In addition, the train of thought is different between these two sides.

For instance, the heightened volatility at the end of 2008 was considered too treacherous for bankers. Actual position-taking among these players has been thinner than in previous years since the breakdown of Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns sent fear through the market. Traders have more rules on who they can deal with. The crisis has also led many houses to disable algorithmic trading models, which had been big volume drivers. In addition, currency market flows in the institutional investor space can change for any number of reasons, like hedging strategies or just a need to move money.

However, trading trends observed at dbFX are not unlike those among larger investors.

Traders moved away from the carry trade, where they were chasing interest rate differentials, in favor of chasing trends. The pairs with the most volumes were the majors – euro-dollar, U.K. pound-dollar and dollar-yen.

-By Riva Froymovich, Dow Jones Newswires; 201 938-5063; riva.froymovich@dowjones.com

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Equinix Q1 Earnings Preview: Bellwether for Colocation Sector

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Equinix (EQIX) will be reporting 1Q 2009 results on Wednesday, April 22. Its numbers will probably represent a bellwether for the whole colocation sector.

Equinix guidance, given on its last conference call, was forecasting revenues in the range of $198.0 to $200.0 million (consensus is at $ 198.91 million), and EBITDA is expected to be between $86.0 and $88.0 million, with cash gross margins at 63%. The company doesn’t usually issue outlook for EPS, while analysts expect Equinix to earn $ 0.18, with a wide bracket between their numbers, ranging from $ 0.06 to $ 0.29.

The company is also expected to spend a large part of its forecasted 2009 CAPEX in the quarter, with capital expenditures expected to be between $ 100.0 and $ 110.0 million, including $ 20.0 million of ongoing CAPEX.

This quarter should not see a strong impact from currency fluctuations (which we expect just slightly negative for the Euro and the British Pound) like in the 4Q 2008, when the European subsidiary grew on a same currency basis 11%, although it showed a 4.6% decline in US currency.

We also take the opportunity to resume the guidance issued for the whole year, as the wording of the P/R announcing the conference call (the company will discuss first quarter results … and outlook for the second quarter and full year 2009) seems to suggest the intention to update or narrow full year outlook:

  • For the full year of 2009, total revenues are expected to be in the range of $855.0 to $875.0 million. Total year cash gross margins are expected to be approximately 63%. Cash selling, general and administrative expenses are expected to be in the range of $160.0 to $170.0 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the year is expected to be between $365.0 and $385.0 million. Capital expenditures for 2009 are expected to be in the range of $325.0 to $375.0 million, comprised of approximately $60.0 million of ongoing capital expenditures and $265.0 to $315.0 million of expansion capital expenditures.

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Telx Opens a New Data Center

Friday, April 17th, 2009

One of the great things about colocating at a location like Telx, is the availability to network providers. When deciding who to colocate with you need to ensure that the data center is Carrier Agnostic. That means they do not select which Carriers are allowed in their facility, but leave it open to all. When selecting Networking solutions, Carrier Agnostic comes in to play again. When a Carrier provides a quote for the best connection between two points, many times they are only providing you THEIR best connection between those two point. Their connection is not always the BEST connection. Working with Network Integrators allows a client to get the BEST not the BEST we have. Companies such as CFN Services, who utilize optimal spans from multiple Carriers, can provide the best connection between point A and point B. They are not restricted by the confines of an already established footprint, they are creating new routes to best meet each of their clients needs. CFN Services is glad to be one of Telx’s Partners offering Low Latency Networking from many of the Telx locations.

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