Some of the world’s top trading firms have agreed to build a faster
data transmission network between Chicago and Tokyo, according to a
person familiar with the matter, a move that would accelerate trading
between two of the major centers of finance.
The roster of firms
in the joint venture -- dubbed Go West -- includes IMC, Jump Trading,
KCG Holdings, Optiver, Tower Research, DRW’s Vigilant division, Virtu
Financial and XR Trading, according to the person, who asked not to be
identified because the agreement is private. A representative for the
group declined to comment.
Go West, the person said, will be made
up of existing wireless towers, fiber-optic lines and undersea cables.
Firms outside the original consortium will be able to access the network
starting in 2017, the person said, adding that the group’s aims include
creating a level playing field for all traders and sharing the expense
of building the network.
Joining forces to build the network signals a truce in the arms race big
traders have waged for years to shave milliseconds off trading times.
Possibly six to 10 separate microwave networks that support speed
trading operate between Chicago and New Jersey data centers where U.S.
stock trading takes place, according to an estimate from Greg Laughlin, a
Yale University astronomy professor who has studied the topic. By
teaming up, traders can cut their infrastructure costs, pitting their
trading strategies against each other instead of just competing on
speed.
Link: Traders Plan Supercharged Chicago-to-Tokyo Network
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