About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Cantor Evaluating Calxeda ARM Chips for 10x Breakthrough

Subscribe to our newsletter

“I think the Calxeda-ARM machine is an exciting step … I’m evaluating carefully how it can impact the metrics I care about,” says Niall Dalton, director of high frequency trading at Cantor Fitzgerald. He is referring to today’s announcement by Calxeda of their very low power microprocessors based on the ARM architecture – and HP’s plan to build servers based on them.

ARM-based chips run on very low power, and are used by many manufacturers of consumer devices, such as mobile phones. Austin, Texas-based Calxeda is, however, building its chips for highly parallel server designs.

The initial EnergyCore processor – or Server on a Chip – from Calxeda includes four ARM cores, 4MB of L2 cache memory, an 80 gigabit per second interconnect and system/power management functions – all requiring just 1.5 watts of power.

HP will build servers with 288 EnergyCores in a 4U appliance. “A single rack of HP’s Calxeda servers delivers the throughput of some 700 traditional servers and dramatically simplifies the infrastructure needed to hook them all together and manage the cluster,” claims Calxeda co-founder and CEO Barry Evans.

“Companies in our industry are constrained by space and power, yet our appetite for analysis is insatiable,” says Cantor’s Dalton, who continues: “We need a 10x breakthrough and this could be it. We are evaluating the Calxeda technology in hyperscale throughput computing for data and simulation intensive applications. The Calxeda Linux platform enables rapid porting of our software, enabling us to quickly leverage the energy-efficient ARM cores and Calxeda’s scalable communications fabric to scale our applications to new heights.”

For financial markets applications, it looks like Calxeda’s performance/power footprint could be a winner for those firms needing to mine data to develop pre-trade models and post-trade simulations – as fast as possible.  And where those systems are in outsourced managed environments, and possibly in proximity and co-lo centres, the operations costs related to space and power can be considerable.
 

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Data platform modernisation: Best practice approaches for unifying data, real time data and automated processing

Date: 17 March 2026 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes Financial institutions are evolving their data platform modernisation programmes, moving beyond data-for-cloud capabilities and increasingly towards artificial intelligence-readiness. This has shifted the data management focus in the direction of data unification, real-time delivery and automated governance. The drivers of...

BLOG

Market Data Users Flag ‘Important Gaps’ in EU Consolidated Tape Plans

As the European Union forges ahead with its ambitious plan for a consolidated tape (CT), key market data user groups have raised concerns, identifying “important gaps” in the current framework. In a joint letter to the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) and the European Commission, EFAMA, EPTA, and Protiviti have outlined a series of...

EVENT

RegTech Summit London

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in London will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the European capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Practicalities of Working with the Global LEI

This special report accompanies a webinar we held on the popular topic of The Practicalities of Working with the Global LEI, discussing the current thinking around best practices for entity identification and data management. You can register here to get immediate access to the Special Report.