Options Trading: Man vs Machine

Discussion in 'Options' started by OddTrader, Aug 23, 2009.

  1. IBM Unveils Prototype of World's Fastest Financial Analysis System --- First-of-a-Kind Research Collaboration Achieves 21 Times Performance Improvement

    http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/27184.wss

    "
    ARMONK, NY - 09 Apr 2009: Today, IBM (NYSE: IBM) unveiled a revolutionary prototype of the world's fastest automated options trading system. During the project, scientists at IBM Research collaborated with TD Securities to achieve a 21 times performance improvement on the volume of data consumed by financial trading systems.

    Financial services firms must rapidly, capture, process and find value in massive volumes of data in order to maximize client returns and minimize risk. Traditional business intelligence approaches -- which rely on capturing, organizing and then querying a fixed snapshot of data -- can no longer keep pace.

    Through the combination of IBM's InfoSphere Streams -- a breakthrough software technology from IBM Research -- and IBM's Blue Gene/P supercomputer, the IBM Research team created a unique stream processing system ideally suited to meet and surpass the demands of the financial services industry. By enabling rapid, intelligent analysis of live streaming data from a practically unlimited number of sources, IBM delivered astoundingly low latency -- the time between when data is received and when it's acted upon -- far surpassing the performance of traditional trading systems.

    "In the constantly evolving electronic marketplace, innovative technology solutions to better manage high volumes of real time information are a significant competitive edge," said Rizwan Khalfan, Chief Information Officer at TD Securities.

    According to the Financial Information Forum, the combined options and equities traffic has exploded, doubling in size every year since 2003. The challenge to ingest, analyze and automatically act upon millions of messages every second is the difference between success and failure for automated trading systems. IBM's use of its unique stream computing architecture and Blue Gene allowed for significant enhancements to real-time messaging and analytical capabilities while offering a simplified, energy-efficient underlying infrastructure.

    The collaboration with TD Securities is part of IBM's First-Of-A-Kind program (FOAK), which engages IBM's scientists with the company's clients to explore how emerging technologies could solve real world business problems. In this collaboration, IBM Research scientists worked with TD Securities to create a tailored, unique system through applying advanced and emerging technologies and new approaches.

    "TD Securities could potentially use the new system to analyze and act on information before their competitors can finish ingesting and analyzing, effectively blinding the competition to its actions," said Nagui Halim, chief scientist of the Stream Computing Project at IBM. "We're not talking about 20 percent faster here. We're talking about 20 times faster," he added.

    Today's exchange data rates challenge financial firms trading systems to process up to two million messages per second. The goal of any automated trading systems is to reduce the time between the receipt of market data messages and the decision, achieving a very low latency while processing extreme amounts of data. The more messages a system can process, the more decisions can be made; hence, the more valuable the system.

    In testing, the system was found to be capable of handling data at 21 times the speed of Options Price Reporting Authority (OPRA), the world's single largest market data feed, while maintaining ultra low end-to-end latencies.

    IBM InfoSphere Streams

    The IBM InfoSphere Streams computing platform offers low-latency, high-throughput analytics processing for the continuous streaming of heterogeneous data, and can scale seamlessly from a single server to thousands of general-purpose computational nodes and/or special-purpose computing architectures such as the IBM Blue Gene supercomputer. The stream processing core continually monitors and adapts to the state and utilization of its computing resources, the information needs expressed by users and the availability of data to meet those needs.

    In financial services, where increasingly volatile trading conditions necessitate ever faster decisions, stream computing is a game-changing technology that enables traders to see clearly through a rising storm of data. By enabling financial services firms to absorb and understand vast quantities of live data from almost limitless sources, IBM's stream software can deliver clear competitive advantage in an increasingly fast-moving and interconnected world. Firms that can derive insight and build new models ahead of the news cycle and faster than the competition will achieve higher margins and faster time-to-market, using their intellectual property to drive competitive differentiation.

    For more information about IBM's InfoSphere Streams product, visit http://www-01.ibm.com/software/data/infosphere/streams/.

    "
     
  2. rosy2

    rosy2



    so it can handle data at 21 times the speed of the OPRA feed. What edge does it have over a system that can handle the OPRA feed as is or 2 times the speed of OPRA?

    i worked in telecoms for a bit and the data was coming in faster than any market data feed.

    what am i missing with this IBM article?
     
  3. just flashing a quote requires one level of performance, heavy numbercrunching of the quotes, substantially more.

    ***

    anyway, since it became all about speed, I've lost interest.
     
  4. nitro

    nitro

    Quite a bit of an edge over 2:1. But many use technology on par of surpasing this...
     
  5. IBM Teams With TD Securities on Super-Fast Options-Trading System

    http://www.itbusinessedge.com/cm/co...n-super-fast-options-trading-system/?cs=31739

    Q
    IBM worked with TD Securities to develop an extremely fast options-trading system — one that runs nearly 21 times faster than systems on the market today, says Bloomberg. The system can process data in less than a millisecond by using stream technology. The technology can also be used in other industries, such as monitoring power loads or the conditions of roads.

    According to Forbes, “stream computing” allows a feed of real-world data going in, while the computer is streaming out answers. Tower Group Analyst Guillermo Kopp explains:

    “What’s interesting is the continuous stream of information on one end and the continuous stream of answers on the other.”

    The new product will go on sale next month.
    UQ
     
  6. That's what we need. To monitor the condition of roads 21 times faster!

    Is that our stimulus money? :p