Review Article Open Access December 22, 2020

Cloud Migration Strategies for High-Volume Financial Messaging Systems

1
Sr DevOps Engineer, USA
Page(s): 1-17
Received
September 09, 2020
Revised
November 27, 2020
Accepted
December 19, 2020
Published
December 22, 2020
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright: Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Scientific Publications
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Cite This Article

APA Style
Segireddy, A. R. (2021). Cloud Migration Strategies for High-Volume Financial Messaging Systems. Current Research in Public Health, 1(1), 1-17. https://doi.org/10.31586/jaibd.2020.1353
ACS Style
Segireddy, A. R. Cloud Migration Strategies for High-Volume Financial Messaging Systems. Current Research in Public Health 2021 1(1), 1-17. https://doi.org/10.31586/jaibd.2020.1353
Chicago/Turabian Style
Segireddy, Avinash Reddy. 2021. "Cloud Migration Strategies for High-Volume Financial Messaging Systems". Current Research in Public Health 1, no. 1: 1-17. https://doi.org/10.31586/jaibd.2020.1353
AMA Style
Segireddy AR. Cloud Migration Strategies for High-Volume Financial Messaging Systems. Current Research in Public Health. 2021; 1(1):1-17. https://doi.org/10.31586/jaibd.2020.1353
@Article{crph1353,
AUTHOR = {Segireddy, Avinash Reddy},
TITLE = {Cloud Migration Strategies for High-Volume Financial Messaging Systems},
JOURNAL = {Current Research in Public Health},
VOLUME = {1},
YEAR = {2021},
NUMBER = {1},
PAGES = {1-17},
URL = {https://www.scipublications.com/journal/index.php/JAIBD/article/view/1353},
ISSN = {2831-5162},
DOI = {10.31586/jaibd.2020.1353},
ABSTRACT = {Key business objectives for digital infrastructure cloud adoption are often framed in terms of reducing cost, improving fault tolerance and resilience, simplifying scale, and enabling innovation. Given the critical nature of the financial sector, however, where timeliness and price can significantly determine an outcome, cloud migration in delivery environments demands greater throughput on the critical path and, in many enterprise-scale settings, forgoes hybrid complexity and multi-cloud risks. Nevertheless, slack in system designs does exist; financial institutions enable market functionality—trading, clearing/best execution—despite potentially being able to meet such sets with lower service levels than other verticals. A cloud multi-account structure for sensitive data, for example, naturally limits exposure when combined with observed risk. Fulfilling predictions of elasticity during periods of high demand usually requires support from a dedicated environment (or environments) located nearer to the operations. Components can consequently be allocated on a per-account basis or maintained as shared sink systems to which the dedicated streams write. The automation code can similarly be targeted for dedicated accounts, avoiding the resource constraints that beset such operations during industry events like emergency triage/contact desking.},
}
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AB  - Key business objectives for digital infrastructure cloud adoption are often framed in terms of reducing cost, improving fault tolerance and resilience, simplifying scale, and enabling innovation. Given the critical nature of the financial sector, however, where timeliness and price can significantly determine an outcome, cloud migration in delivery environments demands greater throughput on the critical path and, in many enterprise-scale settings, forgoes hybrid complexity and multi-cloud risks. Nevertheless, slack in system designs does exist; financial institutions enable market functionality—trading, clearing/best execution—despite potentially being able to meet such sets with lower service levels than other verticals. A cloud multi-account structure for sensitive data, for example, naturally limits exposure when combined with observed risk. Fulfilling predictions of elasticity during periods of high demand usually requires support from a dedicated environment (or environments) located nearer to the operations. Components can consequently be allocated on a per-account basis or maintained as shared sink systems to which the dedicated streams write. The automation code can similarly be targeted for dedicated accounts, avoiding the resource constraints that beset such operations during industry events like emergency triage/contact desking.
DO  - Cloud Migration Strategies for High-Volume Financial Messaging Systems
TI  - 10.31586/jaibd.2020.1353
ER  -