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Quincy Data expands Extreme Data service

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Quincy Data has expanded the Quincy Extreme Data service, adding select equity and energy futures sourced at 350 E Cermak and select cash treasuries sourced in Carteret and distributed at the lowest known latencies.

Quincy now distributes data from eight exchanges to major trading centres in Illinois, New Jersey, the UK and Frankfurt.
 
“Providing the fastest market data as a service – from an independent provider – lowers barriers to entry and enhances competition for all market participants,” says co-founder Stephane Tyc. “It is of little wonder why microwave data continues to penetrate into the mainstream of electronic trading.”
 
The select Cermak-sourced energy and equity futures data is distributed at the lowest known latency in Aurora, IL on Quincy’s Illinois Local service. Quincy distributes this select Cermak-sourced data at the lowest known latency to New Jersey trading centres in Carteret, Secaucus- NY2, Secaucus-NY4, Weehawken-NJ2 and Piscataway. Quincy also distributes select Cermak-sourced futures data to European POPs in Slough-LD4 and Frankfurt-FR2 at the lowest known commercial latencies. All latencies are published on the Quincy website.
 
“Quincy’s data footprint, already the industry’s largest by far, will broaden considerably as we deploy even more data from major US and European exchanges,” says Tyc. “We hope adding key datasets to the QED service will foster competition by making more of the lowest latency market data available as a widely obtainable service.”
 
Quincy now distributes select Carteret-sourced cash yreasuries data at the lowest known latency to trading centres in Aurora, IL and at 350 E Cermak in Chicago. The company also distributes cash treasuries at the lowest known latency on its New Jersey Local service to Secaucus-NY2 and Secaucus-NY4.
 
“Cash treasuries are an important asset class to add to the QED service,” says chief operating officer Jim Considine. “Quincy subscribers can now compete to provide price improvement in the cash treasuries, treasury futures and ETF markets by employing our service.”
 
Quincy is developing an enhanced Illinois Local service with a greater selection of futures contracts trading at 350 E Cermak and Aurora. The company is also developing an enhanced selection of Cash Treasuries instruments for its NJ Local service between trading centres in Carteret and Secaucus (NY2 and NY4).
 
“We have substantially increased both the number of data sources and our international co-lo footprint in the first half of 2014,” says Tyc. “We will complete our mesh of New Jersey POPs when we open Mahwah and will maintain our commitment to fair and robust markets with our ongoing expansion of European data sources and POPs.”

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