Opinion

Trading infrastructure is critical, but it’s still often treated as plumbing

Many firms don’t have a complete, real-time understanding of how their trading infrastructure behaves under live conditions. That hasn’t always been a problem, but it’s starting to become one, writes Tom Lazenga, president, Waypoint Trading Solutions.

Trading itself has changed significantly over the past decade. The volume and importance of data has grown and expectations around speed, performance and global reach have all moved forward. Infrastructure, however, has often evolved in a different way. Rather than being designed as a single system, it has tended to grow over time, shaped by new requirements, new markets and new technologies.  

Across many firms, this means trading environments have been built incrementally. Connectivity is added, market data is expanded, new venues and regions are incorporated. Each step is logical in isolation, but collectively it creates something far more complex, and not always something that is fully understood end to end.  

That is where the issue begins to shift. What was once manageable complexity is becoming something harder to see and harder to control.  

Importance of infrastructure  

Infrastructure can play a direct role in trading outcomes. It affects how quickly firms can access markets, how consistently they can execute and how confidently they can operate under stress. In an environment where performance is measured in microseconds, even relatively small inconsistencies in how systems behave can have a noticeable impact.  

Despite this, infrastructure is still often treated as something peripheral. It is installed, maintained and often only examined in detail when something goes wrong, rather than being actively managed as a core part of trading performance. The gap between expectation and reality is becoming more visible.

Trading desks are expected to operate globally, respond quickly to opportunity, and maintain consistent performance across venues, regions, and time zones. In many cases, they are also adapting to longer trading hours and overnight trading, as well as more fragmented liquidity conditions.   

At the same time, the infrastructure supporting those expectations is often distributed across multiple providers and internal teams. Responsibility is shared, but visibility is not. What is often missing is not capability. It is a clear, joined-up understanding of how those capabilities interact in practice.  

The impacts of AI 

The growing use of AI and data-intensive strategies is accelerating this challenge. Much of the attention has focused on what AI enables in terms of decision making. In practice, however, its impact on infrastructure is just as significant. 

As models become more sensitive to latency and more dependent on proximity to data, compute is moving closer to exchanges, venues and key sources of liquidity. This changes the nature of infrastructure decisions. AI is not just changing how firms trade, it is also influencing where trading effectively takes place. 

In many cases, firms are adapting their models faster than the environments those models depend on. The result is a more distributed and more dynamic trading landscape. Access, which was once a primary challenge, is now more readily available. The harder question is how consistently firms are positioned across that landscape and how well their infrastructure performs as conditions change.  

Combatting complexity  

Performance is no longer defined solely by speed in a single location, but by how reliably systems behave across an environment that spans regions, venues, and data sources. That requires more than capability alone. It requires a clearer understanding of how everything fits together. Without that understanding, complexity does not simply increase, it accumulates over time.  

Complexity in trading infrastructure is rarely engineered, more often, it is accumulated. This can slow the deployment of new strategies, particularly where infrastructure needs to be configured across multiple environments. It can also make troubleshooting more difficult, especially when issues cut across connectivity, data and application layers. 

Perhaps most importantly, it can reduce confidence in how systems will behave under stress, when dependencies are not always fully visible. In some cases, firms are no longer limited by the strategies they can develop. They are limited by the environments those strategies depend on.  

Optimising performance   

The industry has made considerable progress in optimising execution and refining the use of data. However, it has been slower to rethink how the underlying infrastructure is understood and managed. This raises an important question. If infrastructure now plays such a direct role in trading performance, resilience and speed to market, should it continue to be managed as a collection of separate services, or as a system that requires the same level of visibility, design, and accountability as the strategies it supports? 

There is unlikely to be a single answer that applies to every firm. However, the direction of travel is becoming clearer. As trading becomes more global, more continuous and more dependent on data, the ability to understand and actively manage infrastructure will become increasingly important. Ultimately, the difference is not just what firms trade, it is how well they understand the systems that make that trading possible and how those systems actually behave in practice.  

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