There are HFT systems written in Java, lots of them, but I've never heard of a single one written in Scala. Why?
JVM languages, where garbage collectors is a common place, are not axactly a good choice for HFT. But Java is a garbage collected language. So, what is the trick? The trick is that people code HFT in Java as if they were using C, I mean: they trade some niceties Java offers by higher control of memory allocations. The trick is basically replacing the JCF (Java Collections Framework) by mundane arrays pre-allocated in memory, or some other creative solutions.
Scala is a functional programming language which promotes heavy use of functional programming techniques, most of them backed by the collections framework. The point is: if you are going to get rid of the collections framework (by item 1 above), you are basically not using the basic building blocks of FP built in Scala. If you are not doing that in the first place, what is the point of using Scala at all?
Akka does not look to be a good option because... well... it is written in Scala. So, but items (1) and (2), we can rule out Akka too.
The point is: Technology evolved since the question was proposed in 2012. My answer is now 10 years from the future. We have far more interesting options than C or C++, the only possible options in 2012.
OK... maybe not options (in plural)... but one option: Rust.
Rust is not a garbage collected language, it is a safe programming language, it productive, it offers a rich asynchronous library, and it is pretty fast.
The only "problem" with Rust is that people responsible for steering technology in big banks and financial institutions are, in general, averse to innovation, preferring things they already know since the beginning of their long careers. So, in a nutshell, it will take some time until we see HFT systems written in Rust.