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

Change is on the Horizon for Ultra-Low Latency Data

Subscribe to our newsletter

Technology cost and performance have characterised the ultra-low latency data space over the past few years, but change is on the horizon as trading firms review technology investment and chase game changing innovation.

The opportunities and challenges of managing ultra-low latency data will be discussed at next week’s A-Team Group Intelligent Trading Summit in London. Jason England, associate partner at Citihub, will lead the conversation during a panel session – It’s not just about speed anymore: Best practices for accessing and managing ultra-low latency data – and will be joined by experts Graeme Burnett, a specialist in high performance computing; Mark Reece, director of professional services at MCO Europe; Donal Byrne, CEO at Corvil; and Stephane Leroy, founder and chief revenue officer at QuantHouse.

Ahead of the Intelligent Trading Summit, we talked to England and Reece to discover some of the hot topics that will be up for debate on the day. England highlighted the cost pressure in banks, coupled to the problem of dealing with technology investments that are coming to the end of life, such as colocation. He says: “When the market moves, you could be in the wrong colo with the wrong technology. It costs millions to move out, which is difficult in a business with wafer thin margins. Where do you go? What do you do?”

Reece noted that the cost premium problem of ultra-low latency connectivity has pretty much receded with firms looking instead at cost of ownership including software licences, servers and people. He adds: “Cost is important, but not as important as it has been. Control has become more important.”

On innovation, England favours the adoption of radio communication technology being developed by the military and likely to be commercialised. He notes the introduction of microwave technology on the UK to Frankfurt route as the last major disruption in the ultra-low latency data market, and says: “Over the past few years, there has been a lack of disruptive innovation and only incremental improvement. Radio communication could provide a 21 millisecond Atlantic crossing against the 33 millisecond crossing provided by fibre. Using radio communication over long distances may be a few years away, but it could be the next disruptor.”

Join this panel session at the Intelligent Trading Summit to find out about:

  • Drivers of change
  • Technology investment
  • Performance
  • Innovation
Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Agility as Alpha: How Trading Infrastructure Determines Who Wins in Volatile Markets

Date: 21 May 2026 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes Tariff shocks, geopolitical realignment and macroeconomic regime shifts are redrawing the investment landscape faster than most firms’ technology stacks can keep up. For hedge funds and asset managers, the ability to move quickly into new asset classes, geographies or...

BLOG

Industry Cautiously Backs EU Market Reform Ambitions, But Warns Execution Risks Loom Large

A panel at A-Team’s Group’s TradingTech Summit London 2026 offered a broadly supportive but clear-eyed assessment of the EU’s Savings and Investment Union (SIU) package, welcoming the shift toward a competitiveness agenda but warning the reforms risk falling short without bolder action on post-trade interoperability, data quality and regulatory simplification. The session, “The Evolution of...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

Now in its 3rd 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

Data Lineage Handbook

Data lineage has become a critical concern for data managers in capital markets as it is key to both regulatory compliance and business opportunity. The regulatory requirement for data lineage kicked in with BCBS 239 in 2016 and has since been extended to many other regulations that oblige firms to provide transparency and a data...