Getting the Message: Middleware Matters

January 25, 2010
Alexa Jaworski

The race towards zero latency-no delays-in the trading cycle has generated countless breakthroughs in technology. Time gets measured in microseconds. The impact of complex events get calculated before trades are made. Market data are filtered and redistributed to applications that use them in real time.

Now, as trading firms seek to squeeze every last bit of latency from the trading cycle, they are increasingly focusing more attention on middleware, which represents the critical set of applications that must be seamlessly knit together to send and receive market data, reference data, trade/position data, and so forth.

"Messaging is in fact one of the most critical dimensions of the architecture within capital markets," said Scott Reed, an executive with Accenture's trading and risk management practice. "We can talk about the front end and how traders trade, we can talk about how databases are used to extract and store data, but the messaging that moves components around from trading applications down to risk applications and vice versa... that is the area we believe will continue to see a huge upward tick and adoption."

For Silicon Valley-based middleware provider Real-Time Innovations (RTI), the need for speed and lower latency-that the firm has addressed in other industries-is fueling the firm's growth in the capital markets sector.

Currently, RTI's biggest client group is the U.S. government, with applications in almost every Navy program, said RTI CEO Stan Schneider. Other clients include PIMCO, Lockheed Martin, Nikon and Raytheon and the largest single power producer in the U.S., the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington state, which signed on with RTI last October. Unlike trading floors-which can shut down at midnight-the Grand Coulee has a requirement to never, ever shut down, noted Schneider.

"We have applications in many industries-medical devices, automotive systems, flight simulators, car simulators," said Schneider. "The things they all have in common is that they have a requirement to have very reliable delivery."

This requirement can easily be applied to the financial services sector, which RTI has been targeting since it opened an office in downtown New York in September 2008. Schneider, who has a PhD in electrical engineering and computer science, said the financial industry was a natural sector for RTI to expand into.

"It was pretty obvious we had technology that we had a technology that could really help in this market," he said. Last June, RTI unveiled the financial services edition of its Data Distribution Service at the SIFMA Technology Management Conference in New York.

Earlier this month, RTI announced that the global equities division of Citigroup deployed RTI Data Distribution Service in its new automated trading systems in Manhattan and Carteret, N.J. RTI had previously worked with Automated Desk Solutions (ATD), the South Carolina electronic equity trading platform provider Citigroup had acquired in 2007. This recent deployment by Citi is "significant larger," Schneider noted, declining to go into further detail.

Without commenting on its relationships with vendors, Carlos O'Ryan, a managing director in equities technology at Citi, noted that "using the right middleware can help you beat latency, or, simultaneously, using the wrong middleware can introduce a significant amount of latency in your system."

In addition, middleware frees up time, helping users deal with the complexity of a network and simplifying its architecture. This allows software developers to spend more time creating business logic than dealing with intricacies and complexities of how networks work, noted O'Ryan.