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

Time-stamping Needs To Be Better Than Regulators Require, Providers Say

Subscribe to our newsletter

Although the requirement for time-stamping set by Europe’s MiFID II regulation and for the US Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT) is within 100 microseconds of the recognised standard UTC time, in practice firms and exchanges will need their reporting to be accurate down to nanoseconds or just a few microseconds, according to time-stamping services providers.

“High-frequency traders and high-performance traders are transacting in substantially less than 1 microsecond. 100 microseconds is three orders of magnitude out on the level of accuracy of time-stamping,” says David Snowdon, chief technology officer of Metamako. “In a market like Nasdaq, if the response time is 80 microseconds, a trader could place an order, receive a response back, place another order and get another response back, and place a third order. On 100 microsecond timestamp accuracy all three of those could have the same time-stamp, totally legally. The 100 microsecond limit is nowhere near good enough to provide an idea of what order the events happened in the market.”

The communications protocols used for financial industry trade reporting, such as precision time protocol (PTP) and network time protocol (NTP) can achieve accuracy, and therefore time-stamping, in nanoseconds, according to Snowdon. This is achievable on transmissions between points as far apart as New York and London, he adds.

Accurate time-stamping is important to operations as well as compliance, states Heiko Gerstung, managing director at Meinberg, a German company that makes electronic clocks capable of nanosecond-level accuracy, for use in industries. “Customers want to be able to correlate stamps from different systems with each other to get information,” he says. “The easiest is measuring the time it takes from one transaction being generated to being received by another system, and then to be forwarded to the exchange.”

Meinberg’s capabilities include detection of what parts of a network are slower than others, which allows users to replace or improve parts of their network, and therefore reduce the overall latency of their solution. As Snowdon says, delays happening in fiber cables can make time synchronisation challenging. Regarding MiFID II’s 100 microsecond standard, Gerstung adds, “You have to make sure the clocks are well below 100 microseconds of divergence from UTC. If this is not the case, you are not complying with the regulation, in our opinion.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: How to develop a reporting framework for ESG disclosure regulation

ESG reporting is a challenge and additional burden for many financial institutions as regulations continue to evolve, ESG data management is complex, and global standards remain elusive. Helpful solutions include reporting frameworks that support the collection, understanding, and management of ESG data for disclosure. This webinar will provide practical guidance on how to build a...

BLOG

TNS Expands Market Data Solutions Through West Highland Acquisition

Earlier this month, Transaction Network Services (TNS) acquired West Highland Support Services, with the aim of enhancing TNS’s services across the entire trading infrastructure stack. According to the company, this strategic move positions TNS as the only Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) provider offering a vendor-neutral approach to market data application management. “This is a great fit,” Steven...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

The AI in Capital Markets Summit will explore current and emerging trends in AI, the potential of Generative AI and LLMs and how AI can be applied for efficiencies and business value across a number of use cases, in the front and back office of financial institutions. The agenda will explore the risks and challenges of adopting AI and the foundational technologies and data management capabilities that underpin successful deployment.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2023 – Eleventh Edition

Welcome to the eleventh edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a popular publication that covers new regulations in capital markets, tracks regulatory change, and provides advice on the data, data management and implementation requirements of more than 30 regulations across UK, European, US and Asia-Pacific capital markets. This edition of the handbook includes new...