Subscribe

Raymond James moves data center to Denver

Weather worries trigger move away from Florida headquarters.

Concerns about increasing hurricane frequency prompted Raymond James Financial Inc. to move its data center to Denver from its headquarters in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Plans for the relocation have been under way since mid-2012, but the most extensive data move occurred over the three-day Presidents Day weekend.
The Denver facility will have 30 employees. Globally, Raymond James employs 10,000 people, with approximately 3,500 at its home office.
The decision to house Raymond James’ primary technology hardware in a 50,000-square-foot facility in Denver was triggered by concerns about the weather and potential natural disasters, according to company officials.
The new center will feature feeds to multiple power grids, expanded Internet capabilities and additional redundancies, said David Allen, chief technology officer.
Before selecting Denver, the company studied a handful of geographic locations across the country, according to Mr. Allen.
“Denver was most immune to natural disasters,” he said. “We are at the scale and failure capabilities of a world-class data center.”
Raymond James’ operations, information technology and other support functions continue to be located in St. Petersburg, as well as in Memphis, Tenn., and Southfield, Mich.
David Shepard, senior vice president of sales and marketing at Fortrust, a large data services provider with offices in Denver, Phoenix and Edison, N.J., said that risk mitigation is a primary reason why financial services firms move data centers.
“Denver is an ideal location for a data center because of its central proximity and low geographic risk,” he said. “For financial services, the Denver location provides access to a low-cost power grid and a strong employment base because of tech sector investment by the state of Colorado as well as colleges with computer engineering programs.”

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Going paperless: Advice industry takes on challenge

In an industry notorious for documents and signatures, firms welcome chance to automate

Ritholtz Wealth Management launches robo platform

Digital startup Upside powers Barry Ritholtz and Josh Brown's new platform for emerging investors

This ain’t no Fantasyland: Tales from T3

Amid red-eyed financial geeks, our intrepid reporter spots a theme: The robo-adviser threat.

Advisers seek balance between client service and automation

Effective communication takes place when the receiver interprets the sender's message in precisely the fashion in which the sender intended it, according to The American College's “Fundamentals of Financial Planning” textbook.

Cybersecurity a major priority in independent broker-dealers’ 2015 tech budgets

Preventing hack attacks is a big concern for independent broker-dealers heading into next year based on their planned technology spending.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print