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

Quincy Data Extends Low Latency Market Data Service to Frankfurt

Subscribe to our newsletter

Quincy Data has pushed further into Europe with the extension of its Quincy Extreme Data service to Frankfurt. The Frankfurt service distributes CME Group market data from the CME Aurora data centre in Chicago to the FR2 data centre in 37.79 milliseconds. The company has also lowered the latency of distributing CME Group data from Aurora to the LD4 data centre in Slough, west of London. This service was first offered in May 2013 at 36.40 milliseconds rack to rack, a latency that has been lowered to 35.39 milliseconds.

With the Quincy Extreme Data service established at LD4 to meet the needs of collocated trading firms and the Frankfurt service due to be ready for client use next week, Quincy plans to add more London points of presence over the next two months. It is also close to delivering a market data service that will distribute select data from Eurex to London, Chicago and a number of New Jersey collocation centres including NY2, NY4, Carteret, Piscataway and soon Mahwah.

Stephane Tyc, co-founder of Quincy Data, explains: “Quincy’s European expansion is our next phase in delivering a market data service that is fast, fair and flexible. It allows the lowest latency market data to be bought as a service, lowering barriers to entry and fostering competition.”

In terms of the need for speed, he adds: “When automatic trading systems have a decision cycle that is less than a few milliseconds, our data service becomes an obvious choice. With fibre, decisions are made on stale data. This practical and powerful arithmetic is driving mainstream adoption of the Quincy Extreme Data Service.”

To date, Quincy has delivered its low latency market data service in the US and Europe on the back of microwave and fibre networks built by partner company McKay Brothers, but the European expansion breaks with tradition to use microwave connectivity provide by an unaffiliated, unnamed telecoms carrier that initially developed a low latency microwave network for internal purposes. Tyc comments: “Quincy Data is always about being fastest to deliver market data. If McKay or another provider delivers faster paths, Quincy will want to upgrade.”

Quincy expects both existing and new customers with collocated automated trading strategies to benefit from its lowest latency services to and from Europe, and suggests that, over time and dependent on customer demand, it will extend the Quincy Extreme Data service to other European cities.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Enhancing trader efficiency with interoperability – Innovative solutions for automated and streamlined trader desktop and workflows

Traders today are expected to navigate increasingly complex markets using workflows that often lag behind the pace of change. Disconnected systems, manual processes, and fragmented user experiences create hidden inefficiencies that directly impact performance and risk management. Firms that can streamline and modernise the trader desktop are gaining a tangible edge – both in speed...

BLOG

TP ICAP Acquires Neptune Networks to Build Integrated Electronic Bond Trading and Data Business

TP ICAP Group plc has acquired Neptune Networks, a provider of real-time pre-trade bond market data, as part of its strategy to expand its presence in the electronic credit trading space. Neptune was previously owned by a consortium of leading investment banks. The acquisition will bring together Neptune’s established data platform and Liquidnet’s electronic credit...

EVENT

Data Management Summit New York City

Now in its 15th year the Data Management Summit NYC brings together the North American data management community to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

The Global LEI System – A Solution for Entity Data?

The Global LEI System – or GLEIS – has been in development since the middle of last year. Development has been patchy at times, but much has been done, leaving fewer outstanding issues, but also raising new questions. What’s emerging is a structure for the GLEIS going forward, complete with a mechanism for registering and...