CEP is intelligent software that is essentially the next step in algorithmic trading – it sifts through market events looking for possible patterns and acts on them. A recent study into banks’ IT spending patterns by consultancy Aite Group, suggested that while budgets as a whole were likely to shrink by 5%, CEP investment remains on an upward trajectory. 36% of respondents to the survey intended to spend more on CEP this year than in 2008.
Adam Honore, senior analyst at Aite and author of the report, says: “We’re still bullish on the potential for CEP across financial services. Once one group successfully deploys a CEP application, word spreads and more technology groups look at CEP to help solve their issues.”
N. Abe, und R. Khardon (Hrsg.) Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam, (2004)Papers from the 12th Annual Conference (ALT'01) held in Washington, DC, November 25--28, 2001, Theoret. Comput. Sci. 313 (2004), no. 2.
C. Lasarczyk, und W. Banzhaf. GECCO 2005: Proceedings of the 2005 conference on
Genetic and evolutionary computation, 2, Seite 1635--1640. Washington DC, USA, ACM Press, (25-29 June 2005)
M. Land, und R. Belew. Evolutionary Programming IV Proceedings of the
Fourth Annual Conference on Evolutionary Programming, Seite 403--413. San Diego, CA, USA, MIT Press, (1-3 March 1995)
K. Sia, .. J, K. Hino, Y. Chi, S. Zhu, und B. Tseng. , in Proceedings of the International Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (Boulder Colorado, March 2007),, Seite 161-168. (2007)
J. Thangavelautham, und G. D'Eleuterio. PPSN VIII: Proc. 8th Int'l Conf. on Parallel
Problem Solving from Nature, Volume 3242 von LNCS, Seite 991--1000. Birmingham, UK, Springer, (18-22 Sept. 2004)