Open Source Making Inroads on Wall Street

NEW YORK—Linux and open-source technologies are here to stay and will continue to make inroads into the financial services sector, speakers from both the vendors and Wall Street communities said here at the Linux on Wall Street conference.

In a session titled “Leveraging Open Source to Build Cutting Edge Trading Applications,” Jeremy Lehman, chief software architect for global equities at Citigroup, told attendees on April 24 that open source has changed the traditional buy-versus-build scenario to one of buy, build or extend.

“Open source allows you to add features that are very specific to your business, while it also provides effective alternatives to J2EE [Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition], which has perhaps not lived up to expectations,” he said.

Click here to read how an open-source framework can make Java easier for developers.

Lehman and his team are building a new algorithm-based trading system to help align the Citigroup organizational structure, processes and incentives so as to orchestrate deep change.

Algorithmic trading has four principle challenges: latency and throughput, market data, productivity, and market access, Lehman said, adding that the challenge is not coming up with new algorithms, but rather translating those into reusable software.

No single source of data is reliable enough for Citigroup’s needs right now, he said, and the company needs to be able to translate that data quickly, effectively and accurately while being the first to do that.

There are a number of innovations coming down the pike from Citigroup on that front, “but we’re not going to discuss that now,” Lehman said.

Open source is not in as broad use in other parts of the world as it is in the United States, and Citigroup faces some pressure to use it globally. “But we expect that to change significantly over the next few years,” he said.

The total cost of ownership is not a primary driver for using open source, Lehman said, but it’s rather about focus and investing where there would be a distinct advantage to the business.

Read here about two reports IBM sponsored that laud the benefits of Linux.

From a Wall Street perspective, the question of using open source involves looking at whether or not the software can create a significant competitive advantage.

If the answer to that is yes, this then needs to be internally developed. If the software will not bring a competitive advantage, it should be outsourced and acquired from a vendor or found in open source and extended, Lehman said.

He also recommended that customers not treat vendors just as vendors, but rather create relationships with a small number of those who can provide the products and services to meet their needs.

While open source is attractive in that it is the easiest migration path from proprietary Unix to Linux on Advanced Micro Devices or Intel chip sets, that software still has a way to go on a number of fronts.

“A few things remain to be done, especially around performance, as open-source software is made to meet the needs of the majority of users. High-frequency trading is at the 0.1 percentile for performance. That is a good thing though, as it allows companies like Citigroup to develop proprietary technologies for this that enhances our competitive ability,” Lehman said.

Read the full story on eWEEK.com: Open Source Making Inroads on Wall Street

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