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Co-location

SEBI to challenge Securities Appellate Tribunal order in NSE co-location scam: What is the case? – The Indian Express

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) will challenge the order of the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT), which set aside Rs 624 crore disgorgement order against the National Stock Exchange (NSE) by the market regulator in the co-location scam, according to a report by The Indian Express.

On Monday, the tribunal also set aside another order by the market regulator that had asked the former NSE chief executives and managing directors Ravi Narian and Chaitra Ramkrishna to disgorge a substantial portion of their salary.

Apart from this, SAT directed NSE to deposit Rs 100 crore to the Investor Protection and Education Fund (IPEF) created by the SEBI. In its order, SAT said, We must observe that when serious allegations were made against a first-level regulator, namely, NSE, Sebi should have been proactive and should have conducted the investigation seriously.

Sebi had adopted a slow approach and, in fact, was placing a protective cover over NSEs alleged misdeeds. It is only when questions were placed on the floor of the Parliament that Sebi woke up and instituted an investigation. The scope of the investigation was limited.

Co-location is a data centre facility where third parties can lease space for servers and other computer hardware. They provide infrastructure like power supply, bandwidth and cooling for setting up servers and storage of data. Customers usually rent out space by rack, cabinet, cage or room.

The NSE introduced co-location facilities in 2009 and offered traders/brokers the ability to place their servers within NSEs data centre for a fee. By being in close proximity to the stock exchange servers, traders/brokers would have faster access to the price feed and the execution of trades, due to the low latency connectivity.

In January 2015, a whistleblower wrote a complaint to SEBI, alleging that some brokers who leased space at the NSE co-location facility, were able to log into the NSE systems with better hardware specifications while engaging in algorithmic trading. This allowed them unfair access from the period 2012-2014, as the hardware specifications gave them a split-second advantage in accessing the price feed.

A minuscule difference in time can lead to huge gains for a trader. At that time NSE used to disseminate information through unicast, which is a single, direct request sent from one host to another, with only those hosts interacting over the route.

Following the complaints by the whistleblower, SEBI formed an expert committee under the guidance of its Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) to examine the allegations against NSE. It found that stock brokers at NSEs co-location facility were given preferential access, as they could log onto multiple dissemination servers through the multiple IPs assigned to them.

The committee also found that NSE followed a static mapping process for allocating members IPs to dissemination servers due to which a few brokers were able to log on to the fastest dissemination servers. At least 15 brokers were identified by SEBI for having preferential access.

Following its investigation into the issue, SEBI in 2019 directed NSE to disgorge Rs 624.89 crore and barred the exchange from accessing the market for funds for six months.

SEBI also asked the former NSE CEOs, Ramakrishna and Narain, to disgorge 25 per cent of their respective salaries drawn during a certain period. They were also prohibited from associating with a listed company or a market infrastructure institution or any other market intermediary for a period of five years.

In February 2022, the regulator once again fined Ramakrishna and Narain for corporate governance lapses in the appointment of NSEs group operating officer, Anand Subramanian, who was later arrested by the CBI. Ramakrishna was arrested in March 2022 and continues to be in jail for another matter regarding the illegal phone tapping of NSE employees.

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SEBI to challenge Securities Appellate Tribunal order in NSE co-location scam: What is the case? - The Indian Express

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Co-location

Consultation begins for SSE Renewables first solar and battery co-location project in Ireland – Solar Power Portal

Published: 25 Jan 2023, 13:43

The battery energy storage system would be co-located adjacent to SSE Renewables substation at the 18 turbine Richfield Wind Farm in Bridgetown, County Wexford. Image: SSE.

SSE Renewables has begun a public consultation for its proposed 21MWp solar photovoltaic (PV) array and 10MW/2hr battery energy storage system (BESS) facility in Ireland.

The announcement follows a fleet-wide assessment by SSE Renewables of its existing onshore wind farms to determine possible co-location sites.

The proposed solar farm would be built in the townlands of Hooks and Yoletown, whilst the BESS would be co-located adjacent to SSE Renewables substation at the 18 turbine Richfield Wind Farm in Bridgetown, County Wexford, which has been operational since 2006.

Public consultation will open to members of the public tomorrow (26 January) to gather views from local people in County Wexford.

Project development will also depend on Irelands current grid connection consenting regime facilitating hybrid technology grid connections to allow for the co-location of generation sources, added the renewable generation company.

Last year the Irish Government launched a consultation to create a policy framework that better supported the development of energy storage, describing the technology as a critical system service needed to manage a low carbon electricity system.

"We're taking action at SSE Renewables to deliver the clean energy the world needs right now. At Richfield in County Wexford weve identified an ideal opportunity, located in Irelands Sunny South East, to further explore how we can co-locate solar, battery and wind farm technology to realise our full homegrown renewable energy potential, said Heather Donaldonshore, renewables development and construction director at SSE Renewables.

The proposed development can generate new solar power for immediate use, while also storing surplus renewable energy in a battery storage system for use when its needed most. The result is that this co-location project at Richfield can help export greater levels of renewable energy output to the national grid and contribute to Irelands target of generating 80% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030.

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Consultation begins for SSE Renewables first solar and battery co-location project in Ireland - Solar Power Portal

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Co-location

Three More Indicted in Drug-trafficking Conspiracy – DEA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. Three more defendants have been indicted as part of an investigation into an armed and violent drug-trafficking organization operating in the Kansas City, Mo., metropolitan area.

Anthony D. Harris, 40, and Latrell O. Dean, 19, both of Grandview, Mo., and Seville S. Gardner, 37, address unknown, were charged in a 112-count superseding indictment returned under seal by a federal grand jury on Tuesday, Jan. 24. The indictment, which was unsealed today following Gardners arrest, replaces an indictment returned on March 1, 2022, with three additional defendants and 28 additional counts. Dean was already in law enforcement custody on a separate, but related, matter.

In addition to Harris, Dean and Gardner, the superseding indictment retains 24 defendants charged in the original indictment: Kevin C. Cokes, also known as Big K and Uncle, 61, Mercedez M. Gardner, also known as Twin, 37, November D. Gardner, also known as October and Nuttie, 24, Idella Gardner, also known as Lupi, 35, Delmar L. Hatcher, 52, Nathaniel B. Chapple, 25, Treandre R. Walker, 25, Hazel M. Berymon, 65, Carlton L. Burns, also known as Pooder, 25, Christopher J. Hicks-Berry, 36, Kyeir C. Theus, 36, Tony L. Davis, 53, Michael R. Parks, 63, Brian T. Boxly, 46, Parris J. Walker, 28, Jachobette J. Gardner, 43, Reginald L. Mitchem, 43, Martell C. Cratch, 31, Matthew Rogers, 60, Gloria Hutchinson, 38, Eddie L. Nicholson, Jr., also known as Junior, 55, Toneisha R. Blackmon, 30, and Shania N. Bailey, 24, all of Kansas City, Mo., and Deone D. Gardner, also known as Twin, 29, of Belton, Mo.

Two defendants charged in the original indictment, Eliot E. Cox, 33, and Anthony D. Stuckey, 67, both of Kansas City, Mo., are omitted from this weeks superseding indictment as they already have pleaded guilty to charges contained in the original indictment.

Among the charges added to the superseding indictment is one count of conspiracy to tamper with a witness. November Gardner and Deone Gardner allegedly conspired to use physical force against an undercover agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to influence or prevent the undercover agent from testifying at their trial.

The superseding indictment alleges that 26 of the 27 defendants participated in a conspiracy to distribute cocaine, fentanyl, and marijuana in Jackson County. Cokes is charged with participating in a separate, but related, conspiracy to distribute cocaine.

Harris and Gardner are solely charged in the drug-trafficking conspiracy. Dean is also charged with one count of participating in a robbery conspiracy with Walker, one count of the armed robbery of a Dollar General store in Raytown, Mo., one count of the use of a firearm during a crime of violence (the Dollar General robbery), one count of possessing marijuana with the intent to distribute, and one count of possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime. Dean allegedly possessed a Glock 9mm pistol in furtherance of the drug-trafficking conspiracy and in furtherance of the possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute.

In total, in addition to the two drug-trafficking conspiracy counts and the witness tampering conspiracy, various defendants are charged in two armed robbery conspiracy counts, three business robbery counts (two Family Dollar robberies in Kansas City and the Dollar General robbery in Raytown), 23 drug-trafficking counts, 30 counts related to illegally possessing firearms, one count of destroying a motor vehicle in a drive-by shooting, and 50 counts of illegally using a telephone to facilitate a drug-trafficking conspiracy.

According to court documents, the ATF began investigating an armed drug trafficking organization operating primarily in east Kansas City, Mo., in April 2021. Members are known to sell marijuana, crack cocaine, powder cocaine, purported ecstasy pills, purported Percocet pills (believed to be counterfeit pills made with fentanyl), and purported OxyContin pills. Members are known to carry firearms and commit acts of violence. Court documents allege the organization is connected to at least two shootings in which three victims were wounded.

As a result of that year-long investigation and subsequent indictment, more than 200 law enforcement officers from the ATF, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department and the Independence, Mo., Police Department participated in an operation on March 8 and 9, 2022, that led to the arrests of 25 of the defendants. Officers seized 27 firearms, 1,877 rounds of ammunition, more than 11.1 kilograms of marijuana, 300.9 grams of cocaine, 278.91 grams of other illegal drugs, and $34,439 in cash.

The charges contained in this indictment are simply accusations, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charges must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Byron H. Black and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie C. Bradshaw. They were investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Independence, Mo., Police Department, Missouri State Highway Patrol, the Buchanan County, Mo., Sheriffs Department, the Johnson County, Kan., Sheriffs Department and the St. Joseph, Mo., Police Department.

KC Metro Strike Force

This prosecution was brought as a part of the Department of Justices Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) Co-located Strike Forces Initiative, which provides for the establishment of permanent multi-agency task force teams that work side-by-side in the same location. This co-located model enables agents from different agencies to collaborate on intelligence-driven, multi-jurisdictional operations against a continuum of priority targets and their affiliate illicit financial networks. These prosecutor-led co-located Strike Forces capitalize on the synergy created through the long-term relationships that can be forged by agents, analysts, and prosecutors who remain together over time, and they epitomize the model that has proven most effective in combating organized crime. The principal mission of the OCDETF program is to identify, disrupt, and dismantle the most serious drug trafficking organizations, transnational criminal organizations, and money laundering organizations that present a significant threat to the public safety, economic, or national security of the United States.

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Three More Indicted in Drug-trafficking Conspiracy - DEA

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Co-location

Carter Lumber Co. to invest $8.1 million in Warren County location – The Lane Report

FRANKFORT, Ky. Carter Lumber Co., one of the nations largest lumberyard businesses, announced it would expand its presence in Bowling Green with an $8.1 million investment creating 86 quality jobs. The new construction is part of the companys rebuilding efforts following the devasting tornadoes that impacted much of Western Kentucky in December 2021.

The new facility will feature state-of-the-art technology and equipment that will allow Carter Lumber to serve better customers who rely on the services provided at the lumberyard in northern Warren County.

The location will allow for added manufacturing capabilities of the roof and oor trusses and wall panels and carry engineered wood products. The companys door and mill building will be upgraded with a larger, 1,200-amp electrical service and an additional 22-foot-wide warehouse door with an added concrete approach driveway. At the truss building, 16,800 square feet of additional concrete will be added along with two new 18-foot warehouse doors and openings for exit and feed rollers for improved truss production. The new facility is expected to be completed by the end of 2023 and will be located in the Kentucky Transpark.

We are proud to be a part of the Bowling Green community and are committed to helping it recover and thrive, said Jeff Donley, president of Carter Lumber. This new facility is just one way we can contribute to the rebuilding efforts and ensure the growth of our Carter Lumber operations and the many builders we service in the area to rebuild stronger and better than before.

Founded in 1932 in Akron, Ohio, private and family-owned Carter Lumber is the United States fourth largest professionally focused lumber and building material supplier. The company primarily services professional builders through its more than 170 locations across 13 states. Carter Lumber operates under four uniquely branded divisions: Carter Lumber, Holmes Lumber Co., Kight Home Center and Kempsville Building Materials.

Carter Lumbers investment adds to Kentuckys impressive manufacturing presence, which includes 5,000 facilities that employ around 250,000 residents. According to the National Association of Manufacturers, over 13% of the commonwealths workforce is in manufacturing, well above the national average of 8.5%.

To encourage investment and job growth in the community, the Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority (KEDFA) on Thursday preliminarily approved a 10-year incentive agreement with the company under the Kentucky Business Investment program. The performance-based agreement can provide up to $750,000 in tax incentives based on the companys investment of $8.1 million and annual targets of:

By meeting its annual targets over the agreement term, the company can be eligible to keep a portion of the new tax revenue it generates. The company may claim eligible incentives against its income tax liability and/or wage assessments.

In addition, Carter Lumber can receive resources from Kentuckys workforce service providers. Those include no-cost recruitment and job placement services, reduced-cost customized training and job-training incentives.

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Carter Lumber Co. to invest $8.1 million in Warren County location - The Lane Report

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Co-location

Bogart’s Doughnut Co. to open new Twin Cities location – Bring Me The News

Bogart's Doughnut Company announced it is opening a second location in the Twin Cities.

The popular donut shop, based at904 West 36th Streetin Minneapolis, has confirmed on Instagram it's opening a new shop in theMiracle Mile shopping center on Excelsior Boulevard, in St Louis Park.

"Here to clear up the rumors and confirm the facts: we have broken ground on a new shop!" the Instagram post reads, though there's no confirmation on an opening date.

The Daily Meal writer Aaliyah Gibsonproclaimed Bogart's as having Minnesota's best donuts in 2020, praising its distinctive brioche dough for making the pastries "so irresistible and buttery."

The company, founded by Anne Rucker in 2014, ventured across the Mississippi to open a temporary space in theKeg and Case Market in St. Paul in 2018, though has since exited.

Its donuts can also be found at the Wedge and Linden Hills Co-ops in southwest Minneapolis.

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Bogart's Doughnut Co. to open new Twin Cities location - Bring Me The News

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Co-location

Department of the Air Force review to improve domestic violence … – Air Force Link

ARLINGTON, Va. (AFNS) --

The secretary of the Air Force directed a 90-day cross-functional review Jan. 25 to comprehensively assess how domestic violence victims are supported in the Department of the Air Force.

"Domestic violence has no place in our Air and Space Forcesit breaks the bonds of our service family, destroys individuals, families, and our communities, and is illegal," said Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall. "We owe survivors of both domestic violence and sexual assault a foundation of trust to report violence, and confidence that all members of the Department of the Air Force know how to effectively respond and support."

An Inspector General of the Department of the Air Force investigation into allegations concerning improper handling of domestic violence incidents found areas for improvement in establishing trust and rapport with victims, particularly in the early stages of reporting, response and investigations.

"While we have taken actions to improve victim response and support programs, there is more work to be done in earning and sustaining the trust of survivors," Kendall said.

The review will take a holistic look at the DAF's response to domestic violence and the support services offered to survivors of abuse. The effort will include partnering with outside organizations experienced in supporting military spouses and former military spouses who are domestic violence survivors to ensure programs, therapy and services are appropriately designed and employed for the proper prevention and treatment of those experiencing abuse. Additionally, the Secretary issued a call across the DAF to consider how their actions create a safe and responsive environment for potential victims and survivors.

"Every member of our Air Force family deserves dignity and respect, and those who exhibit the strength and courage to seek support must be able to do so with the knowledge they will be treated with genuine care and competence," said Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. CQ Brown, Jr.

The DAF has taken on multiple initiatives in recent years to combat domestic violence.

"Our approach is centered on supporting survivors and helping to prevent domestic violence and/or sexual assault in the first place," said Under Secretary of the Air Force Gina Ortiz Jones. "This is a warfighting issue, a readiness issue and a leadership issue."

The Department of the Air Force recently established a "Connect to Care" approach outlining explicit expectations for providing victim services. In July, the under secretary of the Air Force directed the Integrated Response Center Co-location Pilot at seven installations to improve awareness of response services, minimize re-traumatization to the greatest extent possible and improve data collection and synergy among response providers.

Both initiatives are in direct response to the Department of the Air Force report on interpersonal violence published in 2021 and the Independent Review Commission on Sexual Assault in the Military recommendations with initial feedback showing improvement in support for survivors as they navigate reporting options and available resources.

"Leaders at every level must stand ready to listen and provide the support and resources our Guardians and their families deserve," said Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman. "The Space Force is strongest when our Guardians and families thrive."

Additional actions being taken to improve victim response and support programs include:

Eligible domestic violence victims are also now assigned a victim's counsel (lawyer), which will ensure they receive privileged, confidential legal advice and other legal assistance and support services.

"The core values of the Air Force and Space Force demand a commitment to character and integrity," Kendall said. "Our responsibility as leaders requires us to fully support survivors and sustain their trust in all of our actions."

Kendalls letter to the DAF announcing the cross-functional review can be read here.

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Department of the Air Force review to improve domestic violence ... - Air Force Link

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Co-location

According to Arizton, Massive Investments by Colocation & Cloud … – Yahoo Finance

CHICAGO, Jan. 24, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- According to Arizton's latest research report, the Southeast Asia data center construction market will grow at a CAGR of 1.5% from 202-2028. Growing sustainability initiatives, rise in 5G & edge data center deployment, rising adoption of artificial intelligence, and data localization laws in the region are driving the growth of the Southeast Asia data center construction market. Digitalization of business environments, including migration of on-premises applications to cloud/colocation facilities across Southeast Asia, will continue to grow the demand for data center services in the coming years. The region is witnessing increased investments from hyperscale operators and global colocation operators. Investments are expected to continue to grow during the forecast period, with various companies partnering with local companies to expand their footprint in Southeast Asian countries.

SOUTHEAST ASIA DATA CENTER CONSTRUCTION MARKET

Southeast Asia is one of the developing regions in terms of connectivity, and there are several inland connectivity options available in the countries. Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Cambodia can be connected to the US, APAC, Middle East, and African countries. Due to the growing inland connectivity options, the market is witnessing a growth in huge data generation, storage, and connectivity demand. Many countries are developing submarine cables that can transmit data faster with reduced latency. The deployment of cloud regions by hyperscalers and enterprises across the region enhances the need for high-speed interconnection services, fueling the need for submarine cable projects.

Southeast Asia Data Center Construction Market Report Scope

Report Attributes

Details

Market Size - Investment (2028)

USD 3.02 Billion

Market Size- Investment (2022)

USD 2.77 Billion

CAGR - Investment (2022-2028)

1.48%

Market Size -Area (2028)

2.65 million square feet

Power Capacity (2028)

597 MW

Base Year

2022

Forecast Year

2023-2028

Market Segments

Facility Type, Infrastructure, Electrical Infrastructure, Mechanical Infrastructure, Cooling Systems, Cooling Techniques, General Construction, and Tier Standards

Geographic Analysis

Southeast Asia (Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Philippines, Vietnam, and Other Southeast Asia Countries)

Market Dynamics

Increasing Adoption of Cloud Based Services

Growing Digitalization Initiatives

Increase in Adoption of Big Data & IoT and Smart City Development

A Rise in Submarine Cable Connectivity

Customization Request

If our report does not include the information you are searching for, you may contact us to have a report tailored to your specific business needs https://www.arizton.com/customize-report/3672

Click Here to Download the Free Sample Report

New entrants in the form of global colocation and cloud service providers are investing in the market due to high customer demand for a physical presence. Some new entrants include Data Center First, EdgeConneX, Edge Centres, ESR Cayman, KT Corp, OneAsia Network, Nautilus Data Technologies, Pure Data Centres, and Vantage Data Centers. Governments are also making significant efforts to improve network connectivity by installing 5G network services and IoT solutions. Southeast Asia has improved in terms of connectivity as 5G is spreading at a high pace. This is a major key in attracting foreign direct investments into the Southeast Asia data center market.

Increasing Adoption of Artificial Intelligence Booming the Southeast Asia Data Center Construction Market

AI-based data centers will encourage operators to use data-driven decision-making. AI will also help operators monitor server performance, network congestion, and disk utilization, which will be beneficial in predicting and forecast data and power outages. AI can enhance data center infrastructure and facilitate more intelligent and automated data management. Moreover, deploying AI and ML workloads in data centers will increase the installation of these systems in the future. It is also expected that vendors providing traditional data center cooling systems will partner with liquid immersion and direct liquid cooling vendors to support their existing data center customers in deploying HPC clusters.

Geographical Analysis

Singapore has been a major shareholder in the overall investments in the Southeast Asia data center construction market. However, the market faced challenges led by the moratorium in the country in 2020 and 2021, which was lifted in June 2022, with the authorities announcing invitations for facilities development plans in July 2022.

In 2022, the investments across countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand grew significantly from existing operators along with the entry of new entrants. Other countries, such as the Philippines and Vietnam, have also emerged as new locations that have witnessed an increase in investments for mega and edge data centers.

Several new entrants have been identified in the Southeast Asia data center construction market, including recently established brands and the expansion of China-based operators like GDS Services and OneAsia Network into the Southeast Asian region.

Also, the market is witnessing multiple Joint Venture projects. For instance, in September 2022, Warburg Pincus, a private equity firm, announced a joint venture with Singapore-based Evolution Data Centres to develop hyperscale data centers across the Southeast Asian region.

Other Southeast Asian countries in the market include Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar. Data centers in these countries are still evolving and are expected to witness significant growth with contributions from local and global providers during the forecast period.

The Report Includes the Investment in the Following Areas:

Major Vendors

Support Infrastructure Vendors

ABB

Airedale

Caterpillar

Cummins

Cyber Power Systems

Delta Electronics

Eaton

Fuji Electric

HITEC Power Protection

KOHLER Power

Legrand

Mitsubishi Electric

Narada

Piller Power Systems

Rittal

Rolls-Royce

Schneider Electric

Siemens

STULZ

Trane

Vertiv

Data Center Construction Contractors

Data Center Investors

AirTrunk

Amazon Web Services (AWS)

Big Data Exchange (BDx)

Bee Information Technology

Chindata

CMC Telecom

Converge ICT Solutions

DCI Indonesia

Digital Edge DC

DITO Telecommunity

DTP

ePLDT

Equinix

Facebook (Meta)

FPT Telecom

Google

HTC International Telecommunication JSC (HTC-ITC)

Huawei Technologies

Iron Mountain

Keppel Data Centres

Microsoft

NTT Global Data Centers

Open DC

PP Telecommunication (PPTEL)

Princeton Digital Group

SpaceDC

ST Telemedia Global Data Centres

Telehouse

Telkom Indonesia

True IDC

Vantage Data Centers

Viettel IDC

New Entrants

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According to Arizton, Massive Investments by Colocation & Cloud ... - Yahoo Finance

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Co-location

Creating Connections – Chief Executive

Spoiler alert: this is not another return to the workplace article. We knowjust about every time leaders open their news feeds, there is another headline with some permutation of the words new normal, return to the workplace or future of work. The fact is most organizations have already returned to the workplace in some capacity, and therein lies the opportunity for the year ahead.

What is important for executives to be thinking about, however, is how workplace trends at the micro levelparticularly evolving workstyles and how they enable a hybrid workforceare continuing to impact the macro level. This means not only the physical workplace but, more importantly, the broader real estate and talent footprint. These trends are not simply affecting the size and composition of existing real estate portfolios. Rather, they are also affecting where organizations are thinking about expanding, contracting and rebalancing their leased and owned properties.

We have identified three key challenges organizations are facing across the corporate real estate spectrum. Quality data is the absolute pillar of informed decision-making, yet organizations struggle to aggregate even the most basic information and draw insights from the simplest dimensions of their workforces and workplaces. Layer on new mandates to bring sustainability to the forefront of enterprise operational strategy and add in a mixed economic outlook impacting both the supply and demand of the workforce and workspace, and its easy to understand why so many organizations are still in a holding pattern. As such, the number of published case studies outlining successful footprint rebalancing initiatives have been few and far between.

Looking ahead to 2023, we expect that companies will see their longer-term corporate real estate strategies coming into focus and take steps to react accordingly. Where to begin? Lets start by examining some workstyle trends that will have a cascading effect on the way your organization views the workplace and what that means for your existing portfolio and future real estate footprint.

For many employees, well-being has become not just a priority but a nonnegotiable. There has been a renewed focus on both physical and mental health, and individuals feel empowered to set boundaries with and manage expectations of their employers in ways they hadnt before. The focus on personal well-being includes where and when people work and how people conduct themselves at work. In July, Deloitte asked Americans to reflect on how theyve changed throughout the past year and found that more than 70 percent of respondents said that they are focusing on prioritizing their overall well-being compared to 63 percent the year before.

While employees are focused on their personal wellness, burnout at work remains a major issue. Deloitte research suggests that hybrid work may be a contributing factor. In a recent study surveying women in the workplace by Deloitte, those who changed their working hours during the pandemic were almost three times as likely to feel burned out. The feeling of worker fatigue is impacting a large part of the millennial and Gen Z workforce as well, with 46 percent of Gen Zs and 45 percent of millennials experiencing burnout from their careers.

Data suggests that burnout also extends to executive leadership. Deloittes research found that a majority of employees (57 percent) and most C-Suite executives (70 percent) are considering seeking a job that better supports their well-being. Improving workstyles can mean a lot of things, but ultimately its about providing employees flexibility. For leaders, it means providing flexibility in how, when and where employees work, and providing the guardrails for them to find time throughout the day for well-beingas defined by the individual, not the employer.

Hybrid work continues to evolve and employees are looking for more support. While were well beyond the early days of hybrid work, the policies needed to implement a sustainable model are often missing. Transparent decision-making and clear working guidelines have become a major focus for employees as they operate away from the office. A Deloitte survey found that 58 percent of hybrid-working women felt that they have been excluded from meetings and interactions, and 64 percent said that their employer hasnt set clear guidelines around where and how theyre expected to work. The lack of robust policies anda commitment to mitigation strategies can impact how employees feel about their promotion prospects or how they interact with their teams.

Without question, for many individuals and corporations, hybrid work can promote productivity. But it doesnt come without challenges. Individuals want to see and be seen by leaders, but the workplace must be designed to enable these moments. Meanwhile, organizations want to unlock value from their investments in the workplace, but employees must be present to do so. Executives are taking this challenge seriously. In Deloittes 2022 Fall CEO Survey, 80 percent of CEOs agreed or strongly agreed with the statement that over the next six months, we will develop new tools to drive engagement and loyalty for remote/ hybrid employees that dont depend on co-location. Its not enough to have hybrid work aloneyou need to design hybrid work programs and policies to benefit both the employer and the employee if they are to be sustainable.

As the war for talent continues, what experiences can employers provide to attract and retain employees?

How do companies reconnect employees to a sense of purpose that will keep them engaged?

How has the nature of virtual work changed what employees need for an equitable work experience?

Corporations have the toolsuse them. Employee work styles vary from location to location, reflecting different roles, capabilities and sensibilities. As such, organizations are increasingly focused on accessing accurate, timely and insightful data to understand employee preferences, workstyles and how the workplace and broader footprint should evolve. In a recent Deloitte Dbrief webcast on the future of corporate real estate, Deloitte polled 3,425 participants to ask if they think executives within their organizations have the information necessary today to make informed decisions on the corporate real estate portfolio. Over 48 percent of respondents reported that their organizations were lacking in the availability or quality of data needed to ascertain strategic insights.

Many companies struggle with data quality, aggregation and analysis specifically relating to real-time utilization. While most leading organizations have systems in place to understand the supply side of the equation, the demand side can be a lot harder to gauge. Badging data is imperfect, reservation information may be loosely managed, and cameras and sensors face privacy and general industry adoption challenges, resulting in incomplete and inconsistent views of workplace utilization. Having access to quality utilization data is especially important when evaluating different locations within the same city or region for footprint consolidation initiatives, given that where people work from is less predictable when provided with optionality. For example, is a once-sleepy satellite office now more bustling than the city center headquarters, given the proximity to talent?

Thoughtful investment in the physical workplace is required to keep employees engaged and in the office. Floors of sparsely populated workstations are not a good advertisement for a vibrant and exciting workplace. While thats been the vibe in many offices lately, its about to change. Companies are recommitting to the idea that the workplace plays a significant role in creating connections and fostering collaboration. Deloittes 2023 Commercial Real Estate Outlook reports that 41 percent of real estate CFOs in North America expect that their company will perform a workplace redesign in the next 12 to 18 months, and we can expect a great deal of that investment will be targeted at reducing the amount of individual workstations and providing more places for people to come together for learning and culture building.

Beyond the physical workplace, investment will also be needed to deliver the digital experience. Additional technology infrastructure is required to seamlessly enable connectivity and provide the right environment for a variety of work locations, postures and styles. In Deloittes 2022 Gen Z and Millennial Survey, 20 percent of respondents who have worked remotely said that remote work has made forming connections with colleagues more difficult, and 14 percent said it has made opportunities for mentorship harder to find. This is a big deal, as we know that retaining, rebuilding and redefining corporate cultures in the wake of hybrid work is another challenge we all face.

Part of building a strong culture is through the provision of a differentiated employee experience, and the workplace is often where thats achieved. Executives recognize that the office plays a role in employee satisfaction and retainment. A 2022 Deloitte/CoreNet Global survey on the future of corporate real estate found that the top priority for corporate real estate professionals will be to enhance the employee experience (39 percent) and create positive workplace sentiment. Consumer-like mobile workplace applications enabling individuals to see whats on the menu for the day and where their colleagues have clustered are being deployed to promote connectivity. Providing a variety of furniture configurations to support the multitude of individual and collaborative activities in which we engage in the office also has a major impact on employee engagement and satisfaction. Picture some of the more residential elements we see in office design, such as living-room and dining-room inspired vignettes.

Is our organizations workplace designed to facilitate different types of teaming and collaboration?

What investments are needed to collect and contextualize the right data to make better workplace planning decisions?

Are there additional ways of leveraging technology to blur the lines between the physical and digital workplace experience?

Now is the time to closely review your real estate footprint. Executives are currently examining how employees are adapting to hybrid work and how the real estate portfolio can be optimized. Many corporate real estate leaders are facing the challenge of managing a pre-Covid portfolio that is now oversized. A Deloitte and CoreNet Global 2022 survey found that 75 percent of CRE professionals are likely to change their portfolio size within the next five to eight years, and 47 percent anticipate reducing their footprint. In the near term, decisions about right-sizing the footprint based on actual occupancy data, utilization insights and planned growth trajectories should be a top priority.

Companies are expressing a desire to create flexibility in their portfolios. Revising assigned seating policies and adopting co-working spaces have become popular as executives seek to reduce costs while growth decisions remain in flux. The same 2022 Deloitte/CoreNet Global survey found that a significant majority of corporate real estate professionals anticipate increasing the proportion of amenity and collaboration space (68 percent and 89 percent, respectively), while 67 percent anticipate reducing the proportion of individual space. Space optimization allows for organizations to reduce their fixed commitments without a major hit to the employee experience.

Executives are rethinking their location strategies to take advantage of shifting talent pools. As inflation and economic uncertainty loom large and raise concerns over the cost of living, its no surprise employees are considering or have already made a move. According to Deloitte surveys in 2021 and 2022, a growing percentage of millennials and Gen Zs are reporting that remote work has allowed them to relocate farther away from the office. These trends are having profound impacts on talent pools, suddenly offering employers access to talent at a lower cost while providing employees the flexibility they have come to expect.

As more and more skilled workers gravitate toward areas with lower costs of living, companies are taking note. Executives are looking for ways to access high-quality talent in low-cost environments as the future of the economy remains uncertain. Critical location factors are being revised to think about talent markets that wouldnt have been targeted in the past. With an unprecedented amount of market data available, organizations can broaden their aperture and orient toward areas that best suit their needs. New machine-learning-based tool sets are also playing a significant role by collecting and synthesizing candidate requirements and the ever-expanding global demographic data set to highlight talent markets that may have otherwise been overlooked.

How can excess space be best utilized to enable the right employee experience?

Where does the company need to be in order to attract and retain talent?

What strategies should be considered so that the portfolio can be scaled up/down quickly?

These workstyle, workplace and footprint trends are connected. If you dont understand what your workforce needs, or expects, to be productive, successful and acculturated to your organization regardless of location, you cannot define a set of workplace parameters to meet those needs. If you cant define what the ideal workplace is for your organization, be it the workspace composition, physical design or in-person programming, you cannot successfully determine how much space your organization requiresand in which locationsto be successful.

If that resonates, know youre not alone. In a 2022 Deloitte survey of global real estate CFOs, when asked whether vacancy rates will improve in the next 12 to 18 months, 47 percent responded that they expect levels to either worsenor stay the same, with 53 percent expecting improvement. Executives, feeling uncertain about how to proceed with their own real estate portfolios, routinely ask, What are our competitors doing? rather than embarking on thoughtful and data-driven footprint initiatives. This pause is due to the limited ability most organizations have to access real-time, relevant data about the way their workforce is engaging with the workplace. Often, workplace management systems providing seating capacity data are disconnected from the systems that track occupancy, which are also disconnected from the HR systems indicating which individuals, teams and departments are assigned to a specific campus, building and floor. Organizations must be laser-focused on the questions they are trying to answer so that the required data can be targeted to inform those decisions. Too many companies focus on the quantity, not quality, of portfolio data that impedes consumption and analysis instead of supporting it.

Complicating matters is the need for many organizations to better manage real estate to impact their stated sustainability agendas. Employees are demanding that their employers develop and deliver against sustainability strategies. A 2022 Deloitte survey found that almost two-thirds (65 percent) of business leaders reported feeling pressure from their employees to act on climate change. While green principles span the enterprise, the buildings we occupy, the energy they consume, the waste they produce and the emissions our workforce generates to access them are presenting actionable opportunities to make an impact on carbon emissions. Companies are now treating de-carbonization with equal or greater emphasis as cost reduction when it comes to prioritizing the levers of real estate footprint strategy.

A final consideration is recognizing where we stand today, with the tightest, most competitive talent market in decades. An uncertain economic outlook further clouds organizational decisions about workforce supply and workspace demand. An autumn 2022 Deloitte survey found that 71 percent of CEOs agreed that talent shortages will continue over the next six months. According to Deloittes 2023 Commercial Real Estate Outlook, real estate CFOs are split on whether the cost of capital will worsen (38 percent) or improve (37 percent) over the next 12 to 18 months, and these varying perspectives are manifesting in different footprint strategies. Organizations with vast real estate holdings and head count reductions are accelerating footprint consolidation activities. Conversely, mid- to high-growth companies with more promising economic outlooks see an opportunity to grow their footprint in existing locations and expand to new talent markets.

Today, leading organizations are demonstrating agility by viewing the above pressures as an opportunity, not a challenge, and developing a comprehensive plan that responds to each scenario with a unified strategy. Data and insights from enterprise operations (talent, occupancy, rent expenses, etc.) must be leveraged in concert with sustainability objectives to determine which locations are targets for rebalancingwhether due to the size of a particular office or the role of a specific location in the overall corporate footprint. Landlords, uncertain about the year ahead, are eager to engage.

Ultimately, today is a moment in time. The expectations of our workforce and the workstyles we provide to them will continue to evolve, whether fueled by generational ideologies or external market forces. The implications of our hybrid work strategy and growth (or contraction) of our workforce will continue to inform the mission and meaning of the workplace. The migration and evolution of talent pools and the scale of our workplace needs will continue to challenge leaders to think about where and how much office space is required to best support the workforce.

The new normal is no longer new. Weve returned to the workplace. The future of work is being created every day. Lets start delivering a differentiated employee experienceone that puts the workforce at the center of our workplace strategy. Lets start leveraging workplace technology and data to drive informed and impactful decisions about our portfolios. Lets start adopting workplace policies that balance the needs of employees and employers and define when and where people work. Lets start embracing the possibilities of hybrid work and take action to optimize the corporate real estate footprint as it should have been all along.

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Creating Connections - Chief Executive

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Co-location

Electronic trading support product of the year: TransFICC – Risk.net

TransFICC provides electronic trading support through low-latency connectivity workflow services for banks and buy-side institutions that trade fixed income and derivatives products. These comprise three main services: a consolidated application programming interface (API), a front-officee-trading platform and a consolidated tape pilot.

TransFICCs One API service helps financial institutions connect to multiple execution venues through its own single API, saving them thousands of hours in coding, testing and managing upgrades. TransFICC can connect to trading venues faster than its competitors with a higher degree of accuracy. By reducing connectivity barriers, TransFICCs API allows investors to access trading venues and switch venues with reduced effort and cost.

TransFICC has the speed of technology to match the frequent price updates of execution venues in this new age of volatility, allowing institutions to keep pace with high-frequency trading firms as well as regulatory controls and reporting. In particular, the solution includes a normalised price/order timestamp to the microsecond level, which provides an audit trail and allows institutions to prove best execution. TransFICC can normalise even the most complex datasets and workflows for different asset types in fixed income.

Additionally, TransFICC launched a pilot for the European Union consolidated tape. This electronic service, which collates trading data, such as price and volume, and disseminates it to investors, is built on the same data-centre hosting and normalised APIs that TransFICC already has in production.

Client demand has driven the development of an e-trading suite of services so that, in addition to trading via the API, firms can manually trade fixed income products with TransFICC.

TransFICC uses open-source components and contributes to open-source software, such as its continuous delivery dashboard. The use of an agile development framework, in addition to continuous delivery, enables TransFICC developers to write better code and run multiple levels of testing throughout the development process, while maintaining the flexibility to respond to customer challenges.

TransFICC now offers co-location and cloud hosting. The expectation is that most banks will deploy the solution in Equinix, but TransFICC also offers a lower-cost solution in the form of Amazon Web Services for some of the buy side. TransFICC also uses Aeron technology for faster, low-latency messaging.

TransFICCs focus on technology and innovation allowed it to support multiple trading workflows at 57 trading venues in 2022, up from 30 in 2021, including Tradeweb, Bloomberg and MarketAxess. Driven by client demand, TransFICC successfully automated more than 130 new trading and post-trade workflows on the platform in this time, adding new asset classes, including US credits, mortgages, credit default swaps, repos and collateralised loans, supporting all trade types and protocols.

When we established TransFICC in 2016 our focus was to simplify connectivity for clients and automate often complex fixed income workflows. In 2023, fragmentation is still a significant issue faced by trading firms, but the need to expand distribution, automate trading and reduce costs are more acute. TransFICC now helps dealers in all time zones with these issues and has just added its first buy-side client.

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Electronic trading support product of the year: TransFICC - Risk.net

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Co-location

7 Reasons Why Fast-Growing Businesses Are Turning to Virtual Colocation in 2023 – Data Science Central

By 2025, more than 80% of enterprises will shift from traditional data centers to the cloud or third-party colocation data centers. For most businesses, data is an irreplaceable asset and a key investment area for future growth. Virtual colocation is becoming the talk of how data centers are shifting to adapt to growing business environments. It is based on the evolution of data centers to cloud services that organizations can use to scale their operations by providing their consumers with virtual and secure data centers.

So, what is a colocation data center? Virtual colocation goes beyond offering space for data. Unlike traditional data centers that split their access channels between multiple customers, virtual colocation allows consumers to have an entire data center allocated to them on a virtual sphere.

Due to its efficiency for data management and economical approach, more and more businesses, especially in the IT sector, are choosing to integrate virtual colocation into their operations to enhance their operations and introduce efficient data services for their consumers. Heres a look at a few ways virtual colocation can be beneficial for fast-developing businesses.

Accessing and maintaining physical data centers for their operations can prove costly for businesses, especially those that may not have the capital to sustain them. However, virtual colocation is a cost-efficient approach to enhancing data-focused operations and making systems more accessible to consumers. Virtual colocation reduces the CAPEX (capital expenditures) and expands the IT infrastructure that can run multiple clouds cost-efficiently. It allows businesses to invest in resources more strategically, thereby saving them the overheads of handling traditional data centers.

Virtual colocation goes beyond providing space for different data requirements. With traditional data centers, businesses would have to effectively divide portions for each consumer, which can be challenging due to the dynamic preferences of each customer. With virtual integrations, it is possible to dedicate entire data spaces toward consumer requirements, thereby optimizing the space utilization for data management.

Physical data centers often have limitations with how a business can use and optimize them. There is little room for customization, so enterprises must either adapt to whats available or find a more suitable option. With virtual colocation, organizations can use cloud data centers and systems and tailor them to meet their requirements. The service providers have more room for adjustments, and businesses can opt for operations that will enhance their operations on a broad scale.

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Businesses grow and scale their operations to meet rising demands and services. Traditional data centers are limited in scaling abilities and less likely to adapt to different business requirements. However, virtual colocation supports multiple server integrations and cloud management between multiple locations, such as an Orlando data center and another. It allows growing businesses to scale their services conveniently and adjust to sudden changes.

Traditional data centers often have complications when provisioning parts for different consumer or operational requirements. With virtual colocation, businesses can conveniently equip data spaces, make additions or deletions, and make customizations to accessibility. It gives organizations better opportunities for how they can allocate their data channels and work with them.

Businesses can avoid the expenses of maintaining physical centers and reduce the risk of data loss from physical damages. With traditional data centers, a lot of hardware is involved, leaving room for potential damages that can affect data operations. Virtual colocation minimizes this risk with the help of cloud servers and data systems.

Virtual colocation is highly reliable in its operations compared to physical data centers. It can withstand different vulnerabilities, has enhanced security measures, and has data backups in the event an attack occurs. It gives businesses the security they need with data management for their operations.

Virtual colocation is becoming a reliable source for businesses to enhance their handling of data management and other data-focused services. It ensures high security, is economical and provides organizations with better opportunities to scale their operations efficiently. Colocation also makes data systems more accessible to consumers or business operators, improving how organizations can take up data transactions in the industry.

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7 Reasons Why Fast-Growing Businesses Are Turning to Virtual Colocation in 2023 - Data Science Central