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

A-Team Insight Blogs

Intel Expands Networking Clout with QLogic Buy … But What Impact on Trading Systems?

Subscribe to our newsletter

Intel’s planned acquisition of QLogic’s InfiniBand business – announced last week – further advances its general ‘world domination’ plans in networking. And while its aspirations go way beyond low-latency trading, expect a trickle down that will over time impact how automated trading systems are implemented.

QLogic’s InfiniBand offerings – shortly to be owned by Intel – include switches and network cards, based on its own TrueScale silicon. It’s a product line that will “bring increased options and exceptional value to our data centre customers,” says an Intel executive.

Don’t expect much near-term impact on systems deployed in the financial markets, since QLogic was hardly a player in the vertical where InfiniBand and Mellanox Technologies are synonymous.

Longer term, though, Intel’s continuing push into networking will likely affect not only how data centres in general are built, but technology choices for those implementing low-latency architectures for financial trading.

That push began in 2008 with the acquisition of NetEffect, which used previous InfiniBand experience to implement Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA) protocols in 10 gigabit Ethernet network adaptors.

Last year, it snapped up Fulcrum Microsystems, which develops Ethernet silicon that is found in switches from the likes of Arista Networks and IBM System Networking (Blade Network Technologies as was).

Now it has InfiniBand technology to go along with its strong Ethernet lineup. More significantly, its technology leadership credentials are strong enough to heavily influence technology directions in the financial markets.

While Ethernet technology is approaching the performance of InfiniBand in terms of latency and jitter, the general school of thought is that InfiniBand still has the edge, though it comes with implementation and management baggage. With Intel’s muscle behind Fulcrum’s core technology, further improvements in latency/jitter are very likely, as is packaging of compute and network processing on a single chip.

It will be interesting to see how Intel slices up the networking pie between Ethernet and InfiniBand. One might reasonably surmise that it will continue to push Ethernet in the financial markets, and direct InfiniBand to HPC applications, and leverage it for its many-core processor developments.

It will also be worth watching whether this acquisition also pushes Mellanox into a similar corporate event, as it faces increased competition in its general markets. Some have suggested that Oracle might make a pitch, since it uses Mellanox’s InfiniBand technology in several of its appliance products (including those tuned to run Java for financial trading). Oracle also has an 8.7% stake in Mellanox.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Navigating the Build vs Buy Dilemma: Cloud Strategies for Accelerating Quantitative Research

For many quantitative trading firms and asset managers, building a self-provisioned historical market data environment remains one of the most time-consuming and resource-intensive steps in establishing a new research capability. Sourcing data, normalising symbologies, handling corporate actions and maintaining infrastructure can take months and absorb significant budget before a single model is tested. At the...

BLOG

What the 2026 TradingTech Insight Awards USA Reveal About the Direction of the Trading Stack

The trading stack that North American capital markets ran on five years ago is not the one they run on now. Front-office systems that once stood alone are being asked to talk to one another. Data that was once simply delivered is now expected to drive decisions. And the question vendors hear from buy-side and...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 10th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Trading Regulations Handbook 2021

In these unprecedented times, a carefully crafted trading infrastructure is crucial for capital markets participants. Yet, the impact of trading regulations on infrastructure can be difficult to manage. The Trading Regulations Handbook 2021 can help. It provides all the essentials you need to know about regulations impacting trading operations, data and technology. A-Team Group’s Trading...