Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Equinix’s data center in
Secaucus is highly coveted space for financial traders, given its
proximity to the servers that move trades for Wall Street.
The trophy high-rises on Madison, Park and Fifth Avenues in Manhattan
have long commanded the top prices in the country for commercial real
estate, with yearly leases approaching $150 a square foot. So it is
quite a Gotham-size comedown that businesses are now paying rents four
times that in low, bland buildings across the Hudson River in New
Jersey.
Why pay $600 or more a square foot at unglamorous addresses like
Weehawken, Secaucus and Mahwah? The answer is still location, location,
location — but of a very different sort.
Companies are paying top dollar to lease space there in buildings called
data centers, the anonymous warrens where more and more of the world’s
commerce is transacted, all of which has added up to a tremendous boon
for the business of data centers themselves.
The centers provide huge banks of remote computer storage, and the
enormous amounts of electrical power and ultrafast fiber optic links
that they demand.
Prices are particularly steep in northern New Jersey because it is also
where data centers house the digital guts of the New York Stock Exchange
and other markets. Bankers and high-frequency traders are vying to have
their computers, or servers, as close as possible to those markets.
Shorter distances make for quicker trades, and microseconds can mean
millions of dollars made or lost.
When the centers opened in the 1990s as quaintly termed “Internet
hotels,” the tenants paid for space to plug in their servers with a
proviso that electricity would be available. As computing power has
soared, so has the need for power, turning that relationship on its
head: electrical capacity is often the central element of lease
agreements, and space is secondary.
A result, an examination shows, is that the industry has evolved from a
purveyor of space to an energy broker — making tremendous profits by
reselling access to electrical power, and in some cases raising
questions of whether the industry has become a kind of wildcat power
utility.
Even though a single data center can deliver enough electricity to power
a medium-size town, regulators have granted the industry some of the
financial benefits accorded the real estate business and imposed none of
the restrictions placed on the profits of power companies.
Some of the biggest data center companies have won or are seeking
Internal Revenue Service approval to organize themselves as real estate
investment trusts, allowing them to eliminate most corporate taxes. At
the same time, the companies have not drawn the scrutiny of utility
regulators, who normally set prices for delivery of the power to
residences and businesses.
While companies have widely different lease structures, with prices
ranging from under $200 to more than $1,000 a square foot, the
industry’s performance on Wall Street has been remarkable. Digital Realty Trust,
the first major data center company to organize as a real estate trust,
has delivered a return of more than 700 percent since its initial
public offering in 2004, according to an analysis by Green Street
Advisors.
The stock price of another leading company, Equinix,
which owns one of the prime northern New Jersey complexes and is
seeking to become a real estate trust, more than doubled last year to
over $200.
“Their business has grown incredibly rapidly,” said John Stewart, a
senior analyst at Green Street. “They arrived at the scene right as
demand for data storage and growth of the Internet were exploding.”
Push for Leasing
While many businesses own their own data centers — from stacks of
servers jammed into a back office to major stand-alone facilities — the
growing sophistication, cost and power needs of the systems are driving
companies into leased spaces at a breakneck pace.
The New York metro market now has the most rentable square footage in
the nation, at 3.2 million square feet, according to a recent report by
451 Research, an industry consulting firm. It is followed by the
Washington and Northern Virginia area, and then by San Francisco and
Silicon Valley.
A major orthopedics practice in Atlanta illustrates how crucial these data centers have become.
With 21 clinics scattered around Atlanta, Resurgens Orthopaedics
has some 900 employees, including 170 surgeons, therapists and other
caregivers who treat everything from fractured spines to plantar
fasciitis. But its technological engine sits in a roughly
250-square-foot cage within a gigantic building that was once a Sears
distribution warehouse and is now a data center operated by Quality
Technology Services.
Eight or nine racks of servers process and store every digital medical
image, physician’s schedule and patient billing record at Resurgens,
said Bradley Dick, chief information officer at the company. Traffic on
the clinics’ 1,600 telephones is routed through the same servers, Mr.
Dick said.
“That is our business,” Mr. Dick said. “If those systems are down, it’s going to be a bad day.”
The center steadily burns 25 million to 32 million watts, said Brian
Johnston, the chief technology officer for Quality Technology. That is
roughly the amount needed to power 15,000 homes, according to the
Electric Power Research Institute.
Mr. Dick said that 75 percent of Resurgens’s lease was directly related
to power — essentially for access to about 30 power sockets. He declined
to cite a specific dollar amount, but two brokers familiar with the
operation said that Resurgens was probably paying a rate of about $600
per square foot a year, which would mean it is paying over $100,000 a
year simply to plug its servers into those jacks.
While lease arrangements are often written in the language of real
estate,“these are power deals, essentially,” said Scott Stein, senior
vice president of the data center solutions group at Cassidy Turley, a
commercial real estate firm. “These are about getting power for your
servers.”
One key to the profit reaped by some data centers is how they sell
access to power. Troy Tazbaz, a data center design engineer at Oracle
who previously worked at Equinix and elsewhere in the industry, said
that behind the flat monthly rate for a socket was a lucrative
calculation. Tenants contract for access to more electricity than they
actually wind up needing. But many data centers charge tenants as if
they were using all of that capacity — in other words, full price for
power that is available but not consumed.
Since tenants on average tend to contract for around twice the power
they need, Mr. Tazbaz said, those data centers can effectively charge
double what they are paying for that power. Generally, the sale or
resale of power is subject to a welter of regulations and price
controls. For regulated utilities, the average “return on equity” — a
rough parallel to profit margins — was 9.25 percent to 9.7 percent for
2010 through 2012, said Lillian Federico, president of Regulatory
Research Associates, a division of SNL Energy.
Regulators Unaware
But the capacity pricing by data centers, which emerged in interviews
with engineers and others in the industry as well as an examination of
corporate documents, appears not to have registered with utility
regulators.
Interviews with regulators in several states revealed widespread lack of
understanding about the amount of electricity used by data centers or
how they profit by selling access to power.
Bernie Neenan, a former utility official now at the Electric Power
Research Institute, said that an industry operating outside the reach of
utility regulators and making profits by reselling access to
electricity would be a troubling precedent. Utility regulations “are
trying to avoid a landslide” of other businesses doing the same.
Some data center companies, including Digital Realty Trust and DuPont
Fabros Technology, charge tenants for the actual amount of electricity
consumed and then add a fee calculated on capacity or square footage.
Those deals, often for larger tenants, usually wind up with lower
effective prices per square foot.
Regardless of the pricing model, Chris Crosby, chief executive of the
Dallas-based Compass Datacenters, said that since data centers also
provided protection from surges and power failures with backup
generators, they could not be viewed as utilities. That backup equipment
“is why people pay for our business,” Mr. Crosby said.
Melissa Neumann, a spokeswoman for Equinix, said that in the company’s
leases, “power, cooling and space are very interrelated.” She added,
“It’s simply not accurate to look at power in isolation.”
Ms. Neumann and officials at the other companies said their practices
could not be construed as reselling electrical power at a profit and
that data centers strictly respected all utility codes. Alex Veytsel,
chief strategy officer at RampRate, which advises companies on data
center, network and support services, said tenants were beginning to
resist flat-rate pricing for access to sockets.
“I think market awareness is getting better,” Mr. Veytsel said. “And
certainly there are a lot of people who know they are in a bad
situation.”
The Equinix Story
The soaring business of data centers is exemplified by Equinix.
Founded in the late 1990s, it survived what Jason Starr, director of
investor relations, called a “near death experience” when the Internet
bubble burst. Then it began its stunning rise.
Equinix’s giant data center in Secaucus is mostly dark except for lights
flashing on servers stacked on black racks enclosed in cages. For all
its eerie solitude, it is some of the most coveted space on the planet
for financial traders. A few miles north, in an unmarked building on a
street corner in Mahwah, sit the servers that move trades on the New
York Stock Exchange; an almost equal distance to the south, in Carteret,
are Nasdaq’s servers.
The data center’s attraction for tenants is a matter of physics: data,
which is transmitted as light pulses through fiber optic cables, can
travel no faster than about a foot every billionth of a second. So being
close to so many markets lets traders operate with little time lag.
As Mr. Starr said: “We’re beachfront property.”
Standing before a bank of servers, Mr. Starr explained that they
belonged to one of the lesser-known exchanges located in the Secaucus
data center. Multicolored fiber-optic cables drop from an overhead track
into the cage, which allows servers of traders and other financial
players elsewhere on the floor to monitor and react nearly
instantaneously to the exchange. It all creates a dense and unthinkably
fast ecosystem of postmodern finance.
Quoting some lyrics by Soul Asylum, Mr. Starr said, “Nothing attracts a
crowd like a crowd.” By any measure, Equinix has attracted quite a
crowd. With more than 90 facilities, it is the top data center leasing
company in the world, according to 451 Research. Last year, it reported
revenue of $1.9 billion and $145 million in profits.
But the ability to expand, according to the company’s financial filings,
is partly dependent on fulfilling the growing demands for electricity.
The company’s most recent annual report said that “customers are
consuming an increasing amount of power per cabinet,” its term for data
center space. It also noted that given the increase in electrical use
and the age of some of its centers, “the current demand for power may
exceed the designed electrical capacity in these centers.”
To enhance its business, Equinix has announced plans to restructure
itself as a real estate investment trust, or REIT, which, after
substantial transition costs, would eventually save the company more
than $100 million in taxes annually, according to Colby Synesael, an
analyst at Cowen & Company, an investment banking firm.
Congress created REITs in the early 1960s, modeling them on mutual
funds, to open real estate investments to ordinary investors, said
Timothy M. Toy, a New York lawyer who has written about the history of
the trusts. Real estate companies organized as investment trusts avoid
corporate taxes by paying out most of their income as dividends to
investors.
Equinix is seeking a so-called private letter ruling from the I.R.S. to
restructure itself, a move that has drawn criticism from tax watchdogs.
“This is an incredible example of how tax avoidance has become a major business strategy,” said Ryan Alexander, president of Taxpayers for Common Sense,
a nonpartisan budget watchdog. The I.R.S., she said, “is letting people
broaden these definitions in a way that they kind of create the image
of a loophole.”
Equinix, some analysts say, is further from the definition of a real
estate trust than other data center companies operating as trusts, like
Digital Realty Trust. As many as 80 of its 97 data centers are in
buildings it leases, Equinix said. The company then, in effect, sublets
the buildings to numerous tenants.
Even so, Mr. Synesael said the I.R.S. has been inclined to view
recurring revenue like lease payments as “good REIT income.”
Ms. Neumann, the Equinix spokeswoman, said, “The REIT framework is
designed to apply to real estate broadly, whether owned or leased.” She
added that converting to a real estate trust “offers tax efficiencies
and disciplined returns to shareholders while also allowing us to
preserve growth characteristics of Equinix and create significant
shareholder value.”