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

Corvil Webinar Discusses the Problems of Packet Loss and Some Potential Solutions

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Zoe Schiff

Packet loss caused by network congestion or packet corruption can make trading strategies irrelevant and cause unwanted costs, but these problems can be resolved by using tools that provide visibility of packet loss and its effects.

A recent webinar presented by James Wiley, director of technical product marketing at network data analytics specialist Corvil, set out the problems of packet loss and its effects on user experience, applications and latency, as well as some solutions. Wiley noted that packet loss is particularly evident when applications are running at sluggish rates, video streams buffer, websites take forever to load, there are timeouts and reconnections, and, in the case of voice over IP handsets, they produce robotic sounds.

Real time, interactive media applications are the most susceptible to packet loss due to their reliance on the User Datagram Protocol (UDP), but packet loss can be equally disruptive in a real time trading environment, upsetting trading strategies and costing money rather than earning it.

Wiley noted some examples of packet delays, saying: “Google estimates that half a second of extra delay results in 20% fewer searches, while Yahoo estimates that 0.4 seconds of delay results in 5-9% less page traffic. Amazon statistics stand out, estimating that an increase in delay of one-tenth of a second can translate into a 1% drop in sales.”

There are two primary causes of packet loss, congestion and corruption. Congestion occurs when there is a bandwidth restriction, either physical or imposed. Physical bandwidth restrictions on a network link during times of peak activity cause bandwidth exhaustion, leading to buffer overflow and packet loss. Imposed restrictions used to improve quality of service taper certain traffic flows to allow higher priority flows access to the network link. Corruption results from problems such as poor quality cabling and faulty hardware. These problems cause parts of a packet to be corrupted during transmission with the result that the packet is then cast aside.

Monitoring and diagnostics tools can help to identify these types of problems, and packet loss can be minimised once its cause is known. Corruption is relatively straightforward as hardware failings can be fixed. Congestion is more complex, but there are solutions. Increasing buffering is a low-cost way to approach congestion, but this solution introduces more latency, making it sub-optimal for latency sensitive applications. Another approach is to increase bandwidth, which is likely to be a more costly solution, but will decrease serialisation delay. The downside here is traffic elasticity as bandwidth consumers such as file transfers open large Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) windows, devouring available bandwidth at the expense of other applications.

While these solutions have pros and cons, the crucial component of any solution is summed up by Wiley, who concludes: “Visibility is the key to understanding both packet loss and its effects.”

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

Implementing Events-based Trading and Prediction Markets

By Jon Light, Senior Director of Product Management at Devexperts. The current surging interest in prediction markets is leading to a general reevaluation of this type of trading, with many financial services firms now questioning whether to offer events-based trading to their own users. To date, several high-profile firms have moved to incorporate prediction markets...

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

FRTB Special Report

FRTB is one of the most sweeping and transformative pieces of regulation to hit the financial markets in the last two decades. With the deadline confirmed as January 2022, this Special Report provides a detailed insight into exactly what the data requirements are for FRTB in its latest (and final) incarnation, and explores what needs to be done in order to meet these needs on a cost-effective and company-wide basis.