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The Mankoff 2nd Annual Ultra Low Latency Panel Event: Trading Opportunities in FX and Other Asset Classes: High Frequency Trading, Algorithms & Best Execution

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

CFN Services is a proud sponsor and participant of the  The Mankoff 2nd Annual Ultra Low Latency Panel Event: Trading Opportunities in FX and Other Asset Classes: High Frequency Trading, Algorithms & Best Execution.

We are pleased to announce that Sebastian Yoon, VP CFN Services Financial Services Practice, will be showcased on the panel discussion entitled: Build, Buy and Beyond: Selecting and Implementing the Best Tools to Achieve a Successful Multi-Asset Strategy in Trading

When: March 23, 2011 – 5:45pm – 9:00pm

Where: Grange Holborn Hotel
50:60 Southampton Row
London WC1B 4AR
T: 020 7242 1800

Overview:

Exchange consolidation. Co-location issues. Rate of connectivity and the search for ever lower latency. This environment the trader finds himself in, with the need for speed driving the latest innovations, and the government engaged in push-back, is challenging and one ripe for discussion. The application of algorithms in the high frequency space has been addressed in the equity market but what’s the next area of growth? What developments are occurring in FX, Options, Futures, Commodities and the other asset classes?

Agenda:

5:45 pm Registration

6:15 pm Panel I: Winning the Speed Game While Remaining Compliant: Regulations, Changes in the Markets and its Impact on Trading Across Asset Classes

7:00 pm Panel II: Build, Buy and Beyond: Selecting and Implementing the Best Tools to Achieve a Successful Multi Asset Strategy in Trading

Click here to Register Now

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Using Real-Time Events in Electronic Trading – Wall Street & Technology

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011

As high-frequency and electronic trading continue to proliferate, hedge funds, proprietary trading firms and other asset management firms are being forced to look for new differentiated data sets as factors in their real-time trading models. Competition for alpha has increased from the continued innovations from existing players and the flurry of new high-frequency trading firms entering the market. Sophisticated firms have begun to realize that sourcing new real-time content sets outside of market data is a source of competitive differentiation. Event data has emerged as the leading real-time factor firms have adopted or are evaluating. CFN Services is pleased provide lowest latency news delivery direct from Washington, DC. To inquire about receiving optimized news feeds from 1275 K Street Washington, DC to  your location, click here.

Although machine-readable news has been gaining traction as a delivery channel of real-time, low-latency event information, event data is now being used to help firms gain a competitive advantage that increases profitability and helps manage risk. Event data can be defined as highly structured factual information related to breaking events that trading firms can use to make reliable, real-time programmatic decisions. This form of information is structured and distributed more like market data than other forms of real-time information, such as news or even machine-readable news. This has made it easier for firms who are traditionally quantitatively focused and familiar with market data feeds to more rapidly understand and integrate event data as a new real-time factor into their trading strategies.

Using Real-Time Events in Electronic Trading – Wall Street & Technology.

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Are you Ready…

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

How close have you been paying attention to the Toronto stock markets? It’s time to take notice and ensure you are ready. Don’t miss the window to get lowest latency connectivity to TSX while it is still available. Just the announcement of the London Stock Exchange merger with TSX has increased trading volume in Toronto by over 200%.

If you have not yet, it is time to add TSX into your trading strategy. CFN Services is offering full suite of low latency solutions to TSX; market data, connectivity, proximity hosting, hardware, network and server management in Toronto available.

Let us help you get to Toronto NOW

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TSX, London Stock Exchange to merge – Business – CBC News

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

TSX, London Stock Exchange to merge – Business – CBC News.

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Ekinops White Paper, Truth about Latency

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

Recently, there has been a lot of information distributed in the industry regarding latency in optical transport systems. This white paper takes an objective look at what really causes latency in transport systems and what to look for in a transport system designed for low latency. Download Now

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4GWE Presents, CFN Services, Randy Muench presentation on ROI and the Investments in 4G Networks

Monday, January 31st, 2011

Randy Muench, President of Carriers Division at CFN Services is bringing his experience and expertise to 4GWE event in Miami Florida,

Click Here if you have missed this event, feel free to review the slides from the session, also you may request a personal briefing

Randy brings a unique perspective on the 4G investment ROI drawing on his experience not only with many of the top tier wireless providers; but also from his experience of running Cleartel Communications, a Florida based CLEC. He is able to draw some interesting analogies of the synergy of the market trajectory of the CLECs in the late 1990s with the wireless providers market position now in 2011 and beyond.

4GWE is one of the largest and most popular events collocated at ITEXPO and CFN Services is proud to be able to provide valuable content and knowledge to this premier event.

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Cutting in line with low latency

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Low-latency networking has become a major area of focus recently as service providers seek an optimized strategy to meet metro and regional extension requirements and address latency-intolerant applications within the financial market, among others.

The demands of algorithmic trading in the financial industry has been the primary driver of low-latency networking so far.
Algorithmic trading in financial markets has been the major driver for low-latency optical networking. However, new applications that could benefit from low latency networks are starting to emerge. (iStock)

Electronic trading leads the demand for low-latency connectivity because time is the ultimate factor in success. Electronic communications network (ECN) connectivity between exchanges, hosting centers, and high-frequency trading facilities delivers raw exchange feeds and transaction information to enable traders to grasp opportunities only available for fractions of a second. The classic saying “time is money” holds particular truth in today’s economy, and low latency has become a key differentiator in boosting network infrastructure and building a better bottom line.

When it comes to paying the premium for a low latency service or investing in their own low latency network, companies must ask themselves just how much might really be at stake. A study by Forex mt4 Brokers points to an experiment Commercial Network Services conducted that put this question to the test.

On April 26, 2009, the company restarted demo versions of its expert advisor (EA) automated trading systems with $25,000 of funds in each account to illustrate the importance of low latency to the online trader. In the most dramatic outcome, its New York City-based EA platform enjoyed a 284% larger profit compared to an identical platform in its West Coast data center, although the same New York-based broker controlled both. The EA managed to earn a $870 profit on a $25,000 account after nine days from the US West Coast data center, while the EA situated in the New York City data center earned a $2,475 profit during the same time period – nearly 3X more profit.

The profit variance was due to the proximity of the New York data center relative to the transcontinental latency encountered in communicating with the one on the West Coast. When it comes to latency, the shortest path between two points, say between Chicago and New York, would provide competitive differentiation in the same manner. If there are two network connection options between facilities and one is 10 ms faster—based on the lack of intermediary equipment and an optimized fiber route distance—the information traversing the shorter path will arrive more quickly and will be more useful in latency intolerant applications like market feeds.

Beyond financial applications

The value of low latency goes beyond the financial vertical into other applications and areas within telecommunications. Advancements in optimized WAN transmission modules and platforms are already starting to benefit these applications across a broad range of network operations, including:

  • Cloud services: The prevalence of cloud services has gone well beyond webmail. The cloud is becoming a key aspect of dynamic business operations. On-demand, interactive Web-based applications require low-latency networks to deliver a high quality of experience — a necessity for the cloud service provider to ensure usability and eliminate poor service quality complaints.
  • Consolidated data centers: Many enterprise networks have moved to a consolidated data center strategy to benefit from economies of scale for processing power, storage, and IT staffing. Information and data used across the enterprise needs to be networked (across the metro, region, and nation) and shared with a “LAN-like feel” now that they are physically consolidated in fewer data centers. Low-latency equipment enables efficient information distribution and reliable support for mission-critical applications.
  • Remote business continuity and disaster recovery: Disk mirroring and synchronous replication of data between primary and secondary data centers with a requirement of (near) zero data loss, or a recovery point objective (RPO) near 0, are very latency intolerant. Every bit of extra distance between the primary and backup database is important, especially for regional network connections that move data outside the power grid, weather pattern, or flood zone.
Low-latency should prove to be a boon to the delivery of cloud computing services.
Cloud-based services are just one of several applications that could benefit from new low-latency optical networks. (iStock)

This intensifying need for low latency across multiple markets and technologies hasn’t developed by mere coincidence. People are tired of waiting, and customers will do whatever they can to avoid it.

For example, at The O’Reilly Velocity 2009 Conference, representatives from Google Search and Microsoft’s Bing teams, Jake Brutlag and Eric Schurman respectively, co-presented results from their own independent latency experiments conducted on each site to illustrate the effects of latency on user activity. Bing found that a 2-sec slowdown reduced search queries by 1.8% and revenue per user by 4.3%. Google Search found that a 400-msec delay resulted in 0.59% fewer searches per user, a pretty significant influence for a delay that lasted less than a half of a second. Google Search also found that users performed 0.21% fewer searches even after the delay was removed, indicating a distinct relationship between slow user experience and longer-term consequences.

At the same conference, Shopzilla Vice President of Engineering Phil Dixon provided even more dramatic insight into the impact of latency on the bottom line. Shopzilla launched a year-long performance redesign that produced a 5-sec latency improvement (from ~7 sec to ~2 sec). The result was an astounding 25% increase in page views and a 7-12% increase in revenue. These findings further illustrate the positive effect low latency can have for boosting revenue numbers.

Winning the low-latency race

These examples illustrate the evolution of low-latency connectivity beyond linking the major global financial centers to providing a crucial backbone for general connectivity practices. Cloud services, such as online gaming and shopping, are prime examples.

The research from Google, Bing, and Shopzilla demonstrate that the key to connectivity is a combination of low-latency interconnection and proximity to the user. A network with multiple hubs really close to customers, along with low-latency connections between them, is the best model. Facilities in major cities like Seattle, Denver, Chicago, and Miami rather than a single facility that addresses all of North America can transition service-level agreements (SLAs) from 30-msec latency for the continent to less than 10 msec for the majority of cases.

With so much money on the line, speed and reliability are essential. Numerous companies therefore are making note of the measurable advantages associated with reducing latency. For traders and financial firms especially, ridding their services and private networks of latency is a primary focus; even equipment latency—measured in microseconds—is now evaluated to see just how low connection latency can go. Latency reduction is becoming an all-out race as new businesses and financial firms look to get an edge on the competition.

With so many developments in low-latency network infrastructure, who knows what else might be in store for the technology and telecommunications industries. In today’s economy, consumers need ever faster access to information because they can’t afford to wait and deal with lags or errors in their system. The demonstrated success that comes with reducing latency seems to prove that patience isn’t a virtue in the marketplace today, not when organizations have so much access to technology optimized for network efficiency.

The current push for ultra-low latency certainly seems to indicate that the trend towards nearly instantaneous information flows is here to stay as well. Networks will continue to evolve in time, but speed will always be a determinant factor. As network architects of all types begin to examine latency moving forward, the mantra seems to be: Go low or get left in the dust.

Jason Smith is Technical Solutions Marketing Manager for BTI Systems. He has more than 10 years of experience in telecommunications in roles including network planning, enterprise network consulting, managed services business development, and product marketing.

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Trading Opportunities and Developments in FX & Other Asset Classes

Friday, December 17th, 2010

Join CFN Service, at the Mankoff Group Event: January 12, 2011 5:30 – 9:00pm

Event Venue:
The Mid-America Club
200 E. Randolph Drive, 80th Floor
Chicago, IL 60601
Tel: 312-856-9483

FX high-frequency trading is primed to grow quite rapidly as first-generation high-frequency trading firms are joined by an influx of next generation equity and futures HFT firms looking to capture uncorrelated alpha in FX. In FX, options and other asset classes beyond the equities market, utilizing high frequency trading is the hunt for milliseconds; gaining the advantage over the competition while also remaining compliant with the latest regulatory developments.

This environment the trader finds himself in, with the need for speed driving the latest innovations, and the government engaged in push-back, is challenging and one ripe for discussion. Join us for an evening discussion, one of the series of High Frequency Trading events produced by the Mankoff Company, and learn from your colleagues in the industry. Our panels bring together trading experts, leading practitioners and innovators in the field of high frequency trading in FX and other asset classes.


5:45 pm
Registration
6:15 pm Panel I: Winning the Speed Game While Remaining Compliant: Regulations, Markets and the Impact of HF Trading in FX and Other Asset Classes

This panel addresses:

  • Updates on the latest regulations affecting HFT in FX and other asset classes
  • Fragmentation, liquidity and the markets in FX and beyond
  • Benchmarking the components of an execution framework for HFT
  • Achieving best execution with the implementation of an HFT application

Panelists include:

  • Stacey Mankoff, Managing Principal, The Mankoff Company – Moderator
  • Greg Ingrassia, Senior FX Trader, XR Trading
  • Aaron Lebovitz, Principal, Infinium Capital Management
  • John Barun, Former Managing Director and CIO, Proprietary Trading Firm
  • Paul H. Constantino, Managing Partner, Fultech Consulting
  • Mark Casey, President, CFN Services
7:00 pm Panel II: Build, Buy and Beyond: Selecting and Implementing the Best Tools to Achieve a Successful HFT Strategy

This panel addresses:

  • Key considerations in building a HFT platform: Assessing the efficiencies that can be achieved through hardware, tuning and OS tweaks
  • Evaluating the best FX ECN for your trading style
  • Next phase in HFT: Thoughts on options, FI – beyond equities and FX and the search for liquidity

Panelists include:

  • Erik Lehtis, President, DynamicFX Consulting – Moderator
  • Patrick Hourihane, Partner, X-Pat Trading LLC
  • Dan Torrey, Head of EBS North America Sales, ICAP
  • Gray Lorig, CIO, Trading Cross Connects
  • Daniel M. Gramza, President, Gramza Capital Management, Inc
  • TBD, Thomson Reuters
8:00-9:00 pm Networking Reception
Immediately following the Roundtable Panel Sessions there will be a Networking Cocktail Reception allowing attendees and speakers further opportunities to discuss the most top of mind issues of those involved in the financial markets
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Launching a High Frequency Trading Firm

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

High frequency trading, at its core is a technical undertaking. Each firm entering this space must confront a series of tough questions. CFN Services, offers an Ultra-Low Latency Global Exchange Platform that allows you to utilize the services that you need to outsource, while still maintaining control of your full network and ecosystem infrastructure. For proximity hosting, connectivity, hardware, front-line trading software, post-trade processes and research tools, CFN can offer you as little or as much support and services as you require. Click here for a Technical Infrastructure Outline of the pieces to consider when setting up your high frequency trading platform. If you would like more information on how CFN Services can support your needs contact us today

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What is Proprietary Trading?

Friday, October 29th, 2010

The definition of proprietary trading, or “prop trading” is activity whereby a company’s traders trade equities, futures, or other products actively, using money staked by the firm instead of their own capital, or a client’s money. In other words, the company takes on the risk and puts up the capital and margin money (also known as proprietary funds), and then takes any liability for losses on itself. Whenever there’s profit from this kind of activity, the firm and the trader split the profits.

It’s almost always true that individual prop traders working at a firm are self-employed. The traders take speculative positions in the market using the company’s money with the intention of generating profits.

Each trader pays for the facilities he or she uses when trading, with something called a “desk fee” or “seat charge.” This ranges widely but a trader may typically pay out between $1000-$5000 per month, depending on the services he requires for his trading. The desk fee cost includes sophisticated tools such as analytic packages, market data, exchange connectivity, newswire feed, and low latency order routing technology. In order to ensure you are controlling your success, many firms opt to manage their own infrastructure. Companies such as CFN Services, allow companies to outsource their platform, while still maintaining leading latency connectivity. CFN also offers options for those who want to manage their complete infrastructure offering layer 1 connectivity between all the major financial exchanges in the world.

Proprietary firms and their traders generate huge trading volumes collectively, within the markets they trade in. This means that there are economies of scale, resulting in low-cost clearing fees for company traders. The prop firm usually also often has its own membership with the exchanges, meaning that each trader’s account per trade fees and exchange charges are greatly reduced for trade. Typically, a retail futures brokerage like TradeStation charges a fee of $6.99 per contract traded in Bund futures; that’s compared to a proprietary trading firm who would commonly offer fees as low as 0.32 EUR per contract traded in the market. That means that a trader who makes just 75 trades a week with a single futures contract and save over $3700 a month in just commissions.How did prop trading start?

Open outcry trading floors began their demise more than 15 years ago, and electronic trading firms have sprung up to fill the gap. In the early 1990s, Eurex (originally Deutsche Terminborse) launched its trading platform, and traders who were tech savvy paid attention.

More contracts began to become available electronically and, as this happened, electronic only proprietary trading firms began to spring up, primarily in Chicago and London. The London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange (LIFFE) shut down its traditional trading floor in 2000 and began to operate fully with electronic exchanges at that point; also at that point, it launched its Connect platform that has made it truly a force in the marketplace. It meant that a new platform was available to traders, true, but it was also the first architectural system that was truly “open,” allowing independent service brokerage firms and providers to develop individual order routing technology that was front end. Besides that, former floor traders, sophisticated in their own right, were on the street looking for a new way to support their livelihoods and utilise the skills learned in the floor trading environment. Many former floor traders established their own prop trading firms as they transitioned to the electronic environment.

Now, in Chicago, history is repeating itself; although open outcry trading floors have not closed (yet), electronic trading firms are becoming increasingly commonplace and have increased their influence over the last decade as major contracts’ liquidity has moved into electronic markets. There is no truly reliable data that shows the public how much of the futures trading done is actually done by these firms, but anecdotal evidence inidicates that it’s significant. Some of these firms, in fact, say that the collective prop trading volume across all markets is greater than the total daily volume of any one of the four major futures exchanges. Euronext has said that the individuals and firms trading for their own accounts (also known as “independent traders”) comprise about one third of all participants trading on its Connect platform, a constituting as much as half of the volume of its STIR (short-term interest rate) futures contracts.

Increasingly, the electronic trading screen is taking over from the “pit,” or trading floor, with buy and sell orders increasingly done in milliseconds, at the click of a mouse, instead of through the traditional medium of the colourfully attired and shouting floor trader.

CFN Services, is your partner for propitiatory trading. CFN offers a Low Latency Global Exchange Platform, to help provide you all the elements you need for successful trade execution. Combining CFN Servcies’ Exchange Connectivity Offerings that will reach to over 100 data centers by 2011 and the CFN Ecosystem, the Global Exchange Platform provides support for pre-trade, risk maangement, execution and post trade activities. To learn more http://www.cfnservices.com/electronic_trading.asp

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