Title: Game Theory
1Game Theory
Topic 8Auctions
- Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay
for it.
- Publilius Syrus (Maxim 847, 42 B.C.)
2What is an Auction?
- Definition
- A market institution with rules governing
resource allocation on the basis of bids from
participants - Over 30 of US GDP moves through auctions
- Wine
- Art
- Flowers
- Fish
- Electric power
- Treasury bills
- IPOs
- Emissions permits
- Radio Spectrum
- Import quotas
- Mineral rights
- Procurement
3Sample Auction
Mistakes are the portals of
discovery
- James Joyce
4Going Once, Going Twice,
- Bidding starts at 1
- Who will make the first bid?
5Overview of Auctions
- Auctions are a tricky business
- Different auction mechanisms
- sealed vs. open auctions
- first vs. second price
- optimal bidding care in design
- Different sources of uncertainty
- private vs. common value auctions
- the winners curse
6Private Value Auction
7Common Value Auction
8Sources of Uncertainty
- Private Value Auction
- Each bidder knows his or her value for the object
- Bidders differ in their values for the object
- e.g., memorabilia, consumption items
- Common Value Auction
- The item has a single though unknown value
- Bidders differ in their estimates of the true
value - e.g., FCC spectrum, drilling,
disciplinary corporate takeovers
9Basic Auction Types
- Open Auctions (sequential)
- English Auctions
- Dutch Auctions
- Japanese Auctions
- Sealed Auctions (simultaneous)
- First Price Sealed Bid
- Second Price Sealed Bid
10English Auctions
(Ascending Bid)
- Bidders call out prices (outcry)
- Auctioneer calls out prices (silent)
- Bidders hold down button (Japanese)
- Highest bidder gets the object
- Pays a bit over the next highest bid
11Dutch (Tulip) Auction Descending Bid
- Price Clock ticks down the price
- First bidder to buzz in and stop the clock is
the winner - Pays price on clock
12Sample Dutch AuctionMinimum Bid 10
13Sealed-Bid First Price
Auctions
- All buyers submit bids
- Buyer submitting the highest bid wins
and pays the price he or she bid
14Sealed-Bid Second
Price Auctions
- All buyers submit bids
- Buyer submitting the highest bid wins
and pays the second highest bid
15Why Second Price?
- It is strategically equivalent
to an English Auction
16Why Second Price?
- Bidding strategy is easy
- Bidding ones true valuation
is a
(weakly) dominant strategy - Intuition
- The amount a bidder pays is not dependent on her
bid
17Bidding True Valuation
- Say your value is 100
- Why not bid 500?
- If others all bid under 100, no difference
- If someone bids gt 500, no difference
- If someone bids 300, you overpay!
- Why not bid 50?
- If someone bids 80, you lose (but would have
made money bidding 100)
18First Price Auction
- First price auction presents tradeoffs
- If bidding your valuation no surplus
- Lower your bid below your valuation
- Smaller chance of winning, lower price
- Bid shading
- Depends on the number of bidders
- Depends on your information
- Optimal bidding strategy is complicated!
19Which is Better?
- In a second price auction
- bidders bid their true value
- auctioneer receives the second highest bid
- In a first price auction
- bidders bid below their true value
- auctioneer receives the highest bid
20Revenue Equivalence
- All common auction formats yield the same
expected revenue (in theory) - Any auctions in which
- The prize always goes to the person
with the highest valuation - A bidder with the lowest possible valuation
expects zero surplus - yield the same expected revenue
21Revenue Equivalence in the
Real World
- Risk Aversion
- Does not influence 2nd price auctions
- Risk averse bidders are more aggressive
in first price auctions - Risk aversion ? 1st price or Dutch are better
- Non-familiarity with auctions
- More overbidding in second-price auctions
- More overbidding in sealed-bid auctions
- Inexperience ? 2nd price sealed bid is better
22Designing Auction Rules
- Every rule may have unintended consequences
- What is the minimum bid for a new bidder?
- How much must bids be beaten by?
23Importance of RuleseBay
- Three laptops for sale
- Top three bidders pay the third
highest bid - Opening bid 1
- Current high bids
- 50, 80, 400
- How high should the next bid be?
24Importance of Rules FCC Spectrum Auctions
- Discouraging Collusion
- Do not identify highest bidders
- Capturing Surplus
- Do not set a bidding increment
- I bid 8,000,483
- I bid 3,000,395
25Summary
- Bidding
- Bid true valuation in 2nd price auctions
- Shade bids in 1st price auctions
- Designing
- Take advantage of inexperience
- Take advantage of risk aversion
- Do sweat the little stuff
26Sources of Uncertainty
- Private Value Auction
- Difficult to lose money
- Do not bid more than your value
(or less than your cost) - Common Value Auction
- The item has a single though unknown value
- Bidders differ in their estimates
- The winner might be wrong!
27Common Value Auctions
- Example Offshore oil leases
- Value of oil is roughly the same
for every participant - No bidder knows value for sure
- Each bidder has some information
- Auction formats are not equivalent
- Oral auctions provide information
- Sealed-bid auctions do not
28Hypothetical Oil Field Auction
4
5
2
3
1
10
8
9
6
7
10 tracts for sale
each with four bidders
29Hypothetical Oil Field Auction
- Each tract has four bidders
- Each bidder knows the amount of
oil in his or her quadrant - Each quarters value is evenly distributed
between 200,000 and 800,000
- Total value of oil field
Sum of the values of
the four quarters - Type of auction
First price sealed bid
30Oil Field Auction
31The Winners Curse
40
70
50
60
80
60
- The estimates are correct, on average
- What happens if everyone bids his or her estimate?
32The Winners Curse Defined
- If the average estimate is generally correct, the
highest estimate is usually too high - If bids are based on estimates, the highest
bidder overpays - To avoid the winners curse, estimate the average
of the object conditional on winning the auction
33Avoiding the Winners Curse
- Given that I win an auction
- All others bid less than me
- Thus the objects value must be lower than I
thought - Winning the auction is bad news
- One must incorporate this into ones bid
- Assume that your estimate is the most optimistic
34Avoiding the Winners
Curse
- Bidding for a company
of uncertain value
35Avoiding the Winners Curse
The expected value of the object
is irrelevant. To bid
Consider only the
value of the object if you win!
36Avoiding the Winners Curse
- Bidding with no regrets
- Since winning means you have the most optimistic
signal, always bid as if you
have the highest signal - If your estimate is the most optimistic
what is the object worth? - Use that as the basis of your bid
37Summary
- Average value of an object is irrelevant
- Consider only the value if you win
- In common value auctions, assume that you have
the most optimistic estimate
38- The greatest auction in history
- - New York Times, March 16, 1995, p.A17
39More Bidders
- More bidders lead to higher prices
- Example
- Second price auction
- Each bidder has a valuation of either
20 or 40, each with equal probability - What is the expected revenue?
40Number of Bidders
- Two bidders
- Each has a value of 20 or 40
- There are four value combinations
- Pr20,20Pr20,40Pr40,20Pr40,40 ¼
- Expected price ¾ (20) ¼ (40) 25
41Number of Bidders
- Three bidders
- Each has a value of 20 or 40
- There are eight value combinations
- Pr20,20,20Pr20,20,40Pr20,40,20
- Pr20,40,40Pr40,20,20Pr40,20,40
- Pr40,40,20Pr40,40,40 1/8
- Expected price ½ (20) ½ (40) 30
42Number of Bidders
- Assume more generally that valuations are drawn
uniformly from 20,40
- Example
- New Zealand 1993 UHF License Auction
- Second price auction
- Four lots won by Sky Network
Lot High Bid (k) Second Bid (k) price/high
1 2,371 401 17
2 2,273 401 18
3 2,273 401 18
4 1,121 401 36
43Importance of RulesFCC Spectrum Auctions
- Want to encourage minority and female-owned firms
to bid but licenses are very expensive. - Reserve several frequency blocks for smaller
bidders. - Allow 10 down, low interest, remaining principal
owed in 7 years. - What happens?
44Tweaking the Rules II(continued)
- Bid high!
- If licenses end up being worth less, default!
- Of the four largest winners,
- one went bankrupt and defaulted
- one had 1B reduced to 66M in bankruptcy court
- one was a front for Qualcomm
- one was sold to Siemens