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

Let’s Focus on Inter-Party Latency

Subscribe to our newsletter

Latency – and keeping it low – remains a concern for the financial markets. We at A-Team know, because our latest poll at low-latency.com found that 80% of respondents reckoned it will be more of a concern in the future. With all this algo and high frequency trading going on, events in the world would seem to back up what people told us. That said, 15% said that latency would be less of a concern in the future. Perhaps those people are from the old guard exchanges, like London and NYSE, who have latency improvement plans in place.

Our new poll (see the poll section on the middle right of the new low-latency.com home page) is about the subject of inter-party latency: “How important is measuring inter-party latency to your firm?” we ask. Judging by the interest in a new standards initiative focused on it, I would expect the poll to declare that it is very important.

Just to recap: Inter-party latency is about measuring the latency that occurs between trading partners – for example, between a sell-side firm and an exchange. Assuming the numbers are good, those parties want to publish this information – it makes an exchange look good to show how fast they are matching orders, and makes a sell-side firm likewise when it can demonstrate that its DMA architecture is the best. And of course, the customers of those participants want to know the results, good or bad.

Latency monitoring firms like Corvil, Correlix and TS-Associates have offerings in this space, and most would suggest that Corvil is in a leading position, at least on paper, since its appliances are deployed widely at name-brand participants, like Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, BT, Thomson Reuters, Fixnetix, the CME Group and Deutsche Borse.

Now, inherent is making inter-party latency work is that the monitoring appliances at both ends (e.g. the sell-side firm and the exchange) need to be able to communicate and understand one another. Which is fine if both ends have Corvil, or Correlix, or TS-A. But what if both have different vendor appliances? Right now, that’s a show stopper. But does it have to be this way?

Clearly, the members of the FIX Protocol Organization Inter-Party Latency (FIPL) Working Group think not. This new group – it was formed only in December – already has 145 members, which makes it one of the largest. All of the latency monitoring vendors are members, as well as a good few trading firms, and vendors of trading applications.

The working group has already had one telephone meeting, and early tasks are to define some standard terminology and create a flow-chart of the trade life-cycle, so that all the members are speaking the same language – in the hopes that any standard they devise will as well.

So it’s very early days and it’s yet to be seen whether this group will hash out something workable, and how long it will take. And then it will be up for vendors to implement it if they so chose, which may well depend on how much real user pressure there is for it. Maybe the latest poll will provide an indication of that.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Unlocking value: Harnessing modern data platforms for data integration, advanced investment analytics, visualisation and reporting

Modern data platforms are bringing efficiencies, scalability and powerful new capabilities to institutions and their data pipelines. They are enabling the use of new automation and analytical technologies that are also helping firms to derive more value from their data and reduce costs. Use cases of specific importance to the finance sector, such as data...

BLOG

Monaco Protocol Launches With Hybrid Architecture to Bring “Wall Street-Grade” Execution to DeFi

Monaco, a new decentralised trading protocol, has officially launched on the Sei blockchain, aiming to provide institutional-grade infrastructure for the burgeoning tokenised asset market, which is projected to reach $30 trillion by 2034. The protocol, incubated by Sei Labs and Monaco Research, introduces a hybrid trading model it claims can achieve “microsecond execution” on par...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

Now in its 2nd year, the AI in Capital Markets Summit returns with a focus on the practicalities of onboarding AI enterprise wide for business value creation. Whilst AI offers huge potential to revolutionise capital markets operations many are struggling to move beyond pilot phase to generate substantial value from AI.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2025 – Thirteenth Edition

Welcome to the thirteenth edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a unique and practical guide to capital markets regulation, regulatory change, and the data and data management requirements of compliance across Europe, the UK, US and Asia-Pacific. This year’s edition lands at a moment of accelerating regulatory divergence and intensifying data focused supervision. Inside,...