PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2062459
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2062459
According to Mordor Intelligence, the high frequency trading server market size was valued at USD 629.87 million in 2025 and estimated to grow from USD 670.12 million in 2026 to reach USD 900.55 million by 2031, at a CAGR of 6.09% during the forecast period (2026-2031).

This report is Segmented by Processor Architecture (x86-Based Servers, ARM-Based Servers, and More), Form Factor (Rack Servers, Blade Servers, and More), Application (Equity Trading, Foreign Exchange, and More), End-User (Proprietary Trading Firms and Market Makers, Investment Banks and Brokerage Houses, and More), and Geography. The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Algorithmic execution accounts for more than 70% of equity order flow in developed venues, and reinforcement-learning agents are now being embedded directly into FPGA fabric to shave nanoseconds off tick-to-trade cycles. The European Securities and Markets Authority guidance issued in February 2026 requires microsecond-level pre-trade checks that favor on-premises compute over cloud endpoints. Quantitative funds managing more than USD 10 billion in assets deploy inference-capable servers next to exchange engines, converting microsecond gains into multi-million-dollar slippage savings. Memory-bandwidth demands widen, accelerating the adoption of ARM designs such as NVIDIA Grace that deliver 1 terabyte per second of coherent bandwidth. The result is a structural lift in unit shipments of heterogeneous servers across major colocation hubs.
Exchange proximity hosts are upgrading from 10-gigabit to 400-gigabit Ethernet, compressing round-trip times to sub-microsecond territory and setting new floor specifications for network interface cards. Kraken opened a London cage at Equinix LD5 in April 2026 that delivers sub-millisecond access to European venues, drawing crypto market makers that require deterministic flows. CME Aurora added 428,000 square feet of raised floor in partnership with Google Cloud, providing 17-kilowatt cabinets that accommodate dual-socket blade nodes and FPGA accelerators. Kernel-bypass stacks such as DPDK and RDMA are now mandatory features on trading NICs, further intertwining server design with network topology.
Tier-1 exchange-adjacent cabinets range from USD 6,000 to USD 9,600 per month for 10-gigabit connectivity, and premium cages attract USD 15,000 monthly, pushing annual spend beyond USD 150,000 per rack after cross-connects. Liquid-cooling upgrades add USD 50,000-100,000 upfront, forcing mid-tier hedge funds to weigh latency gains against budget limits. Legacy halls lacking chilled-water loops cannot retrofit high-density blades, driving migrations to new builds and elongating payback periods. Some firms downshift to virtual private servers, trading 20 microseconds of latency for monthly bills under USD 2,000, fragmenting demand for cutting-edge hardware.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
ARM-based servers logged the fastest 8.43% CAGR forecast for 2026-2031 as firms prioritize energy efficiency and memory bandwidth. NVIDIA Grace CPUs with 72 Arm Neoverse V2 cores and 1 terabyte per second of bandwidth shipped in 2025, enabling real-time risk simulations that once demanded dual-socket x86 rigs. x86 systems still dominated with 74.32% of high frequency trading server market share in 2025, underpinned by decades of compiled trading logic optimized for Intel and AMD microcode.
The power-density edge for ARM is frequently 30-40%, a benefit that aligns with colocation operators chasing revenue per kilowatt. Recompilation hurdles and limited ARM-native FPGA tooling slow migration for smaller firms, yet partnerships such as Fujitsu-Arrcus-1Finity in March 2026 reveal growing confidence in ARM designs for next-generation cages.
Blade servers are projected to expand at 7.84% CAGR to 2031, eclipsing rack systems in new builds. Cisco's UCS XE9305 chassis hosts 16 dual-socket nodes in 10U, eliminating top-of-rack switch latency and maximizing compute per square foot. Rack servers maintained 63.47% share of the high-frequency trading server market in 2025, reflecting their flexibility in retrofitting sites with lower power envelopes.
Liquid-cooling-ready blade chassis sustain 17-kilowatt cabinets without disruptive retrofits, an advantage as exchange hosts lift density ceilings. Supermicro's March 2026 40-node MicroBlade reduced per-node footprint by 50%, underscoring the economic pressure on square footage. Retrofit constraints will preserve rack prevalence, but greenfield deployments increasingly default to blade.
North America anchored 36.51% of the high frequency trading server market in 2025, supported by CME Aurora, NYSE Mahwah, and Nasdaq Carteret. CME's partnership with Google Cloud delivered 428,000 square feet of additional raised floor, enabling 17-kilowatt cabinets that favor blade and FPGA hybrids. ICE Mahwah reached Tier 4 redundancy with 28 megawatts and sub-1 microsecond precision time protocol in January 2026, cementing a benchmark others emulate.
Asia-Pacific is projected to log a 7.58% CAGR over 2026-2031, the fastest regional climb. Equinix HK6, opening in 2026, positions Hong Kong as a cross-border arbitrage hub linking mainland exchanges. Japan Exchange Group and Korea Exchange rolled out 100-gigabit Ethernet cages, drawing regional proprietary firms. Singapore Exchange continues to offer deterministic access, yet India's National Stock Exchange introduced randomized delays that temper high-frequency incentives.
Europe, the Middle East, and Africa show divergent trends. Eurex Frankfurt and Euronext Amsterdam sustain steady demand, with Eurex charging EUR 6,000-9,600 (USD 6,780-10,848) per cabinet each month. Euronext's July 2024 microwave network lowered London-Bergamo latency below 4 milliseconds, aligning with server placements that exploit fiber bypass. Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds fund nascent digital-asset exchanges, while South America remains in early adoption, limited to B3 Sao Paulo colocation offerings.