The need for low latency amongst high frequency traders makes perfect sense. Once an electronic order arrives at an exchange, the actual trade can happen in less than a millisecond. But does a microwave link actually have a significantly lower latency than a fiber optic link?
The article cites two factors that make microwave links faster:
- The speed of light in air is about 300,000 km/sec, but in fiber is about 200,000 km/sec.
- The route of microwave links tends to be more direct than fiber routes, which usually follow the right-of-way alongside railroads or highways.
So let's do some math on the big market cited by the article: connections for traders in Chicago who are trading on a New York exchange. The direct distance between Chicago and New York is about 1,150 kilometers. Here's our math for each approach.
Fiber optic:
distance = 1,150 x 1.3 (routing length factor) = 1,495 km
latency = 1,495 / 200,000 = 7.45 ms
repeaters = 2 (every 500 km) @ 0.2 ms = 0.4 ms
total latency = 7.85 ms
Microwave
distance = 1,150 x 1.05 (routing length factor) = 1,207 km
latency = 1,207 / 300,000 = 4.03 ms
repeaters = 4 (every 250 km) @ 0.2 ms = 0.6 ms
total latency = 4.63 ms
Microwave beats fiber by 3.22 ms, one way - over three times the trading latency. Yup, that's significant.
But there's one way to make this much, much lower latency, which the article doesn't mention at all – and it's the most common way by far: locate the high frequency trading servers physically nearby the exchange servers. The electronic exchanges all offer (very expensive!) rack space in or near their datacenters for exactly this purpose...
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