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Nasdaq's CEO just threw her support behind the cloud, and said she hopes to eventually move the exchange there

Mar 4, 2019, 23:12 IST

Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

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  • Nasdaq CEO Adena Friedman said the future of finance includes moving all the technology that powers the markets into the cloud.
  • This includes exchanges themselves, which typically sit separated in individual data centers.

New Jersey could soon lose some of its most notorious residents.

The Garden State houses data centers where the vast majority of US equity trading takes place, leading Wall Street firms to buy up space and implement cutting-edge technology in the region. But Nasdaq CEO Adena Friedman said moving exchanges out of these facilities and into the cloud is a key part of how she sees the financial industry evolving over the next decade.

"Every exchange system for the most part is on-premise, sits in a data center and becomes a very bespoke offering by each exchange," Friedman said while speaking at an industry conference last week. "And then you have an ecosystem that sits within the data center as well. If you lift that into the cloud, then you have an opportunity to look at it on a more broad basis in terms of it being a platform for transactions that occur across the world."

Read more: JPMorgan is building a cloud engineering hub in Seattle minutes away from Amazon and Microsoft, and it's planning to hire 50 staffers this year

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Friedman's vision is part of a larger trend she sees of moving the technology that powers the financial markets into the cloud.

Wall Street has spent years growing more comfortable using cloud computing capabilities, which is the use of remote servers that can increase processing power at will as opposed to physically buying and maintaining hardware. More recently, financial firms have begun using public clouds managed by technology giants Amazon, Google and Microsoft, which for years were considered to be too risky by some in the industry.

Friedman said a big benefit of moving to the cloud is the ability to leverage more data. Wall Street firms have grown a strong appetite for alternative data, spending billions of dollars a year on non-traditional data sets firms believe will give them a trading edge.

In the current set up, firms are restricted by using only data that sits within the exchange's own ecosystem, Friedman said.

"I think with all of the infrastructure going to the cloud and all of the data coming in and being able to interact with that infrastructure, you have the opportunity to use a whole range of information to drive investor decisions," Friedman said.

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