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Could you help shave microseconds off trading times?

COMMENTS

what I do not understand is that many firms are using c# and java for algorithmic trading. How can you achieve real-time trading inside of virtual machine.  Read all comments »

Low latency might have been the buzzword for some time now, but it’s tipped to attract a broader range of players as time goes by. Recruitment, however, may have peaked last year.

Technological changes in the latency space have so far been mainly pushed to the buy-side, reckons Pierre-François Filet, CEO and co-founder of program trading platform QuantHouse.

“Firms who are already latency sensitive have already invested in technology. However, 85% of the market is still ‘late’ and they can save milliseconds.”

But if this low-latency explosion is on the cards, it’s yet to affect recruitment, says Stephen Feline, manager at IT recruiters the Kaizen Partnership.

“This was a big hiring focus in 2007, as firms looked to re-build trading systems in order to shave off microseconds. And while there’s still a fair bit of hiring so far in 2008, it’s nothing like on the scale of last year.”

Chris Pickles, head of investment banking and global accounts at BT Global Financial Services, says that firms looking at reducing the latency of their trading systems are taking on people at the top level who have the technical nous to advise on how to proceed.

“A low-latency solution can’t be achieved by software or hardware alone and technologists need to understand how they can work together. On the development side, it’s often getting down to machine code level. The other question is where to find the people who have both the technical and the business knowledge – these are few and far between.”

Feline adds: “It’s about getting down to the syntax behind the code. Taking Java as an example, candidates would have to be very good at core Java and multi-threading, as opposed to J2EE or any kind of web-based applications.”

COMMENTS

ANON, Capital Markets,  Tue 24 Jun 08

please can someone tell me the point of shaving microseconds of a trade?..if you rely on microseconds you probably dont have much of a view on the market or talent anyway..pointless technology, pointless article

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Paul, Equities,  Wed 25 Jun 08

Algorithmic and machine trading my friend. When one company has a jump of a few hundred milliseconds, it makes a huge difference. here in Aust, it makes a large difference when talking with the Hong Kong exchange, and there are several IB's who are investing heavily in gaining those few milliseconds.

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derekli,  Wed 25 Jun 08

what I do not understand is that many firms are using c# and java for algorithmic trading. How can you achieve real-time trading inside of virtual machine. The system may pause for a few seconds or even minutes because of its garbage collector.

Add your comment »

CodingHero, Hedge Funds,  Wed 25 Jun 08

It's about developer productivity too - real time development on real time systems. That's why a lot of hedgies using c#.

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KP, Investment Banking / M & A,  Fri 27 Jun 08

Of course you can achieve real-time in Java, the latest JVM are able to run exceptional well for many years on multi-cores and quad cpu servers. There are of  course different Garbage collectors for different purposes designed especially for this kind of problem

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Anon, Information Technology,  Tue 29 Jul 08

KP: Was that comment of yours intended to have been written in English. It is people like you who give the technology divisions of banks a bad name. You have no class, you can't spell and, of what we can decipher of your writing, it is all but meaningless nonsense.

For example, you say: "the latest JVM are able", which is grammatically incorrect.

How on earth do people like you get recruited?

Add your comment »

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