Auctions and Bidding
Jan 02, 2016
Auctions and Bidding
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Auction Theory
Auction theory is important for• practical reason• empirical reason
– testing-ground for economic theory, especially of game theory with incomplete information
• theoretical reason
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Theoretical Reason
• Help us understand other methods of price formation (posted prices and negotiation)
• Close connections between auctions and competitive markets
• Close analogy between theory of optimal auctions and theory of monopoly pricing
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Types of Auctions
• English auction– ascending-price, open-outcry
• Dutch auction– descending-price, open-outcry
• 1st price sealed bid auction– known as discriminatory auction when multiple it
ems are being auctioned• 2nd price sealed bid (Vickrey auction)
– known as uniform-price auction ...
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Confusing...
In the financial community,
• 1st price sealed bid auction is termed an English auction (except by English, who call it an American auction);
• 2nd price sealed bid auction is called a Dutch auction.
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1st Price Sealed Bid Auction(In the Financial Community)
Price
quantity
Auction size
Awarded price
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2nd Price Sealed Bid Auction (In the Financial Community)
Price
quantity
Auction size
Awarded price
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What are they?
• Yankee auction– multiple-items auction– winners are determined by some
ranking– successful bidders pay what they bid
• simultaneous ascending auction– began in the US in July 1994– US spectrum auction #4 in Dec. 1994
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General Remarks about Auction
• Complex auction strategies– risk attitude, one or multiple items, private
or common value, secret information, etc.
• The only piece of information available to all is the rules of an auction.
• Economists use the framework of game theory to study auction behavior.
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Key Feature of Auctions
The Presence of asymmetric information
• private-value model
• pure common-value model
• general model– each bidder’s value is a general function
of all the privately-received signals
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Theoretical Predictions
• English and 2nd price sealed bid auctions are strategically equivalent, or isomorphic.
• Dutch and 1st price sealed bid auctions are also strategically equivalent, at least in theory.
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Buyer’s Bidding Strategy (I)
• English auction– bid a small amount more until
reaching the valuation, then stop
• 2nd price sealed bid auction– the dominant strategy is to submit a
bid equal to his valuation, namely truth-telling
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Buyer’s Bidding Strategy (II)
• Dutch auction– no “optimal” bidding strategies– decide in advance the maximum amount
to bid
• 1st price sealed bid auction– no “optimal” bidding strategies– tradeoff is between winning more often a
nd benefiting more
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Dutch/FPSB Auctions
Suppose only two bidders. Both bidders’ valuation of the good are taken independently from a uniform distribution over values between 0 and 1.
Bidder 1’s expected return isE(R1) = (V1-b1) Prob(b1b2)
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Suppose you are one of the two bidders involved in the first price sealed-bid auction of a rare stamp. The stamp is worth $700 to you. Having sized up your opponent, you think it could be worth anything between $0 and $1000.
Recall “After work…”
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NE in Dutch/FPSB Auctions
• bi = Vi/2 for the case of two bidders
• bi = (n-1)Vi/n for the case of N bidders
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Bidder’s Winning Strategy
• Avoid pitfalls– winner’s curse
• Always bid cautiously– Don’t let the presence of several
competing bidders push you into making too aggressive a bid.
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You cannot make moneyif you are too cautious?
Milgrom (1989, JEP)...returns in bidding come from cost and information advantages, ... bidders without some advantage have little hope of earning much profit, but could with a little bit of carelessness suffer large losses.
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IndependentPrivate Values
CommonValues
English= 2nd price
Dutch= 1st price
English> 2nd price
Seller’s Expected Revenue(Risk Neutral Bidders)
= <
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IndependentPrivate Values
CommonValues
English= 2nd price
Dutch= 1st price
English> 2nd price
Seller’s Expected Revenue(Risk Averse Bidders)
< ?
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Seller’s Auction Strategy
Revealing information removes uncertainty
– link the final price to outside indicators of value (an authoritative evaluation)
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One
Many
Sellers
One Many
Buyers
Negotiationsusing EDI
Web-basedProcurementauctions
Web-basedsales auctions
Web-basedmany-to-manyauctions
Auctions in E-Commerce
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Auctions in E-Commerce
• Web-based sales auctions– Onsale
• Web-based procurement auctions– GE TPN
• Web-based many-to-many auctions– Arizona Stock Exchange
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Auction in E-Marketplace
• Seller controlled marketplace– vendor web sites with auction
• Buyer controlled marketplace– web site procurement posting– purchasing agents– purchasing aggregators
• Neutral marketplace
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Role of Neutral Intermediary
• Advantage of scale of transaction processing– may act as service bureaus– collect valuable selling/buying
information
• How to provide more value to sellers and buyers