This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
FOREX TECHNOLOGY


Managed Fibre Networks - offering competitive advantages for high performance FX


As the firestorms engulfing financial markets continue to captivate participants and observers alike, the activities of managed network service providers remain, appropriately, largely in the dark. The work of companies specialising in network infrastructure beneath the ground and sea is not likely to make the headlines in the financial or popular press at the moment. But, as Joe Morgan reports in this article, these businesses are at the nexus of the forces driving the development of an increasingly interconnected global financial system, driven in part by the growth of high-speed trading. The fibre optic cabling which links trading hubs together is of vital importance in FX, a global market where traders follow the rising sun to trade on different venues throughout the day.


24-hour by five-and-a-half day market. Tere are pockets of liquidity everywhere across different time zones with platforms running in parallel and firms connecting to nodes at different platforms and they need network connectivity out to different regions. Tey might be co-located in each centre but they still need to know what the black box is doing or what local trading activity is doing in other centres. Tese all need to be interconnected over high-speed fibre.”


H


Spearheaded by this inexorable demand for high- speed trading among financial market participants, FX trading firms are obtaining access to underground and undersea dark fibre connectivity offering increasingly faster roundtrip speeds. Hibernia Atlantic for example,


120 | january 2012 e-FOREX


irander Misra, an independent managing consultant specialising in electronic trading in London, says: “Te FX market is a


a transatlantic submarine communications cable company, has built a 3,741-mile transatlantic fibre- optic cable between Halifax, Nova Scotia in Canada to Southport in England, which has completed successful tests of 100G data transmissions. Te undersea managed fibre network will soon include the deployment of Project Express, a fibre optic cable which will achieve a sub 60 millisecond roundtrip speed. Te communications company has also recently expanded its services across the Asia region in Hong Kong, Singapore and Tokyo, along with plans to open new operations in India.


Meanwhile, Spread Networks, a telecommunications specialist based in Ridgeland, Mississippi, has built a 825 mile fibre optic cable in the straightest possible path between Chicago and New York City. Te dark fibre infrastructure provides a 13.3 milliseconds round trip for customers using the Spread Networks Chicago- New York dark fibre to run their own private optical networks to link the two major US financial hubs.


Serving high-speed FX


“Managed networks offer three main advantages to high-speed trading firms: low latency routes; diversity; and higher capacity for growth,” says Stephen McConnell, director of sales at Hibernia Atlantic in New York.


McConnell highlights the global reach of networks such as Hibernia. Hibernia’s fibre network covers over 120 points-of-presence (POPs) throughout North America, Europe and the Pacific Rim, spanning 24,000 kilometers. He points out that this capacity to link key FX trading venues and data centres together enables FX trading firms to leverage the benefits of low-latency trading across global markets while enlisting the services of just one vendor, which will bill customers for all their network usage.


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34  |  Page 35  |  Page 36  |  Page 37  |  Page 38  |  Page 39  |  Page 40  |  Page 41  |  Page 42  |  Page 43  |  Page 44  |  Page 45  |  Page 46  |  Page 47  |  Page 48  |  Page 49  |  Page 50  |  Page 51  |  Page 52  |  Page 53  |  Page 54  |  Page 55  |  Page 56  |  Page 57  |  Page 58  |  Page 59  |  Page 60  |  Page 61  |  Page 62  |  Page 63  |  Page 64  |  Page 65  |  Page 66  |  Page 67  |  Page 68  |  Page 69  |  Page 70  |  Page 71  |  Page 72  |  Page 73  |  Page 74  |  Page 75  |  Page 76  |  Page 77  |  Page 78  |  Page 79  |  Page 80  |  Page 81  |  Page 82  |  Page 83  |  Page 84  |  Page 85  |  Page 86  |  Page 87  |  Page 88  |  Page 89  |  Page 90  |  Page 91  |  Page 92  |  Page 93  |  Page 94  |  Page 95  |  Page 96  |  Page 97  |  Page 98  |  Page 99  |  Page 100  |  Page 101  |  Page 102  |  Page 103  |  Page 104  |  Page 105  |  Page 106  |  Page 107  |  Page 108  |  Page 109  |  Page 110  |  Page 111  |  Page 112  |  Page 113  |  Page 114  |  Page 115  |  Page 116  |  Page 117  |  Page 118  |  Page 119  |  Page 120  |  Page 121  |  Page 122  |  Page 123  |  Page 124  |  Page 125  |  Page 126  |  Page 127  |  Page 128  |  Page 129  |  Page 130  |  Page 131  |  Page 132  |  Page 133  |  Page 134  |  Page 135  |  Page 136  |  Page 137  |  Page 138  |  Page 139  |  Page 140  |  Page 141  |  Page 142  |  Page 143  |  Page 144  |  Page 145  |  Page 146  |  Page 147  |  Page 148  |  Page 149  |  Page 150  |  Page 151  |  Page 152  |  Page 153  |  Page 154  |  Page 155  |  Page 156  |  Page 157  |  Page 158  |  Page 159  |  Page 160  |  Page 161  |  Page 162  |  Page 163  |  Page 164  |  Page 165  |  Page 166  |  Page 167  |  Page 168  |  Page 169  |  Page 170  |  Page 171  |  Page 172  |  Page 173  |  Page 174  |  Page 175  |  Page 176  |  Page 177  |  Page 178  |  Page 179  |  Page 180  |  Page 181  |  Page 182  |  Page 183  |  Page 184  |  Page 185  |  Page 186  |  Page 187  |  Page 188  |  Page 189  |  Page 190  |  Page 191  |  Page 192  |  Page 193  |  Page 194  |  Page 195  |  Page 196