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COS 444 Internet Auctions: Theory and Practice Spring 2008 Ken Steiglitz [email protected] week 12 1 Multi-unit demand auctions (Ausubel & Cramton 98, Morgan 01) • Examples: FCC spectrum, Treasury debt securities, Eurosystem: multiple, identical units • Issues: Pay-your-bid (discriminatory) prices v. uniform-price; efficiency; optimality of revenue • The problem: conventional, uniform-price auctions provide incentives for demandreduction week 12 2 Multi-unit demand auctions Example 1: (Morgan) 2 units supply Bidder 1: capacity 2, values $10, $10 Bidder 2: capacity 1, value $8 Suppose bidders bid truthfully; rank bids: $10 bidder 1 10 bidder 1 8 bidder 2 first rejected bid If buyers pay this, surplus (1) = $4 revenue = $16 week 12 3 Multi-unit demand auctions Example 1: But bidder 1 can do better! Bidder 1: capacity 2, values $10, $10 Bidder 2: capacity 1, value $8 Suppose bidder 1 shades her demand: $10 bidder 1 for her first unit 8 bidder 2 for first unit 0 bidder 1 for her 2nd unit first rej. bid If buyers pay this, surplus (1) = $10 surplus (2) = $8 inefficient! revenue = $0! week 12 4 Multi-unit demand auctions Thus, uniform price demand reduction inefficiency The natural generalization of the Vickrey auction (winners pay first rejected bid) is not incentive compatible and not efficient Lots of economists got this wrong! week 12 5 Multi-unit demand auctions Ausubel & Cramton prove, in a simplified model, that this example is not pathological: Proposition: There is no efficient equilibrium strategy in a uniform-price, multi-unit demand auction. The appropriate generalization of the Vickrey auction is the Vickrey-Clark-Groves (VCG) mechanism… week 12 6 The VCG auction for multi-unit demand Return to example 1: 2 units supply Bidder 1: capacity 2, values $10, $10 Bidder 2: capacity 1, value $8 Suppose bidders bid truthfully, and order bids: $10 bidder 1 10 bidder 1 8 bidder 2 Award supply to the highest bidders … How much does each bidder pay? week 12 7 The VCG auction for multi-unit demand Define: social welfare = W ( v ) = total value received by agents, where v is the vector of values Then the VCG payment of i is W-i ( 0, x-i ) − W-i ( x ) = welfare to others when i bids 0, minus that when i bids truthfully = sum of ki rejected bids (if bidder i gets ki items) week 12 8 The VCG auction for multi-unit demand Example 1: 2 units supply Bidder 1: capacity 2, values $10, $10 Bidder 2: capacity 1, value $8 If bidder 1 bids 0, welfare = $8, and is $0 when 1 bids truthfully… 1 pays $8 for the 2 items week 12 9 The VCG auction for multi-unit demand Example 2: 3 units supply Bidder 1: capacity 2, values $10, $10 Bidder 2: capacity 1, value $8 Bidder 3: capacity 1, value $6 $10 bidder 1 10 bidder 1 bidder 1 gets 2 items 8 bidder 2 bidder 2 gets 1 item 6 bidder 3 Welfare when 1 bids 0 = $14 Welfare when 1 bids truthfully = $8 1 pays $6 for the 2 items week 12 10 The VCG auction for multi-unit demand Example 2, con’t 3 units supply Bidder 1: capacity 2, values $10, $10 Bidder 2: capacity 1, value $8 Bidder 3: capacity 1, value $6 $10 bidder 1 bidder 1 gets 2 items 8 bidder 2 bidder 2 gets 1 item 6 bidder 3 Welfare when 2 bids 0 = $26 Welfare when 2 bids truthfully = $20 2 pays $6 for the 1 item (notice that revenue = $12 < $18 =3x$6 in uniformprice case, so not optimal) week 12 11 VCG mechanisms (Krishna 02) VCG mechanisms are • efficient • incentive-compatible (truthful is weakly dominant) • individually rational • max-revenue among all such mechanisms … but not optimal revenue in general, and prices are discriminatory, “murky” week 12 12 Bilateral trading mechanisms [Myerson & Satterthwaite 83] An impossibility result: The following desirable characteristics of bilateral trade (not an auction): 1) efficient 2) incentive-compatible 3) individually rational Cannot all be achieved simultaneously! week 12 13 Bilateral trading mechanisms The setup: • one seller, with private value v 1 , distributed with density f1 > 0 on [a1 , b1 ] • one buyer, with private value v 2 , distributed with density f2 > 0 on [a2 , b2 ] • risk neutral … Notice: not an auction in Riley & Samuelson’s class! week 12 14 Bilateral trading mechanisms Outline of proof: We use a direct mechanism (p, x ): where p (v1 , v2 ) = prob. of transfer 12 x (v1 , v2 ) = expected payment 12 b2 p1 (v1 ) p(v1 , t2 ) f 2 (t2 )dt2 prob. selling 1 to 2 a2 b2 x1 (v1 ) x(v1 , t2 ) f 2 (t2 )dt2 E[rev seller 1] a2 U1(v1) x1(v1) v1 p1(v1) E[profit 1] week 12 15 Bilateral trading mechanisms Main result: If [a1, b1] [a2 , b2 ] then no incentive-compatible individually rational trading mechanism can be (ex post) efficient. Furthermore, b1 [1 F (t )] F (t ) dt 2 1 a2 is the smallest lump-sum subsidy to achieve efficiency. week 12 16 Bilateral trading mechanisms Examples 1. f i > 0 is necessary: discrete probs. 2. Subsidy for efficiency: v 1 and v 2 both uniform on [0,1] week 12 17 Auctions vs. Negotiations (Bulow & Klemperer 96) Simple example: IPV, uniform Case 1) Optimal auction = optimal mechanism with one buyer. Optimal entry value v* = 0.5; revenue = 1/4 Case 2) Two buyers, no reserve; revenue = 1/3 >¼ One more buyer is worth more than setting reserve optimally! week 12 18 Auctions vs. Negotiations, con’t Bulow & Klemperer 96 generalize to any F, any number of bidders… A no-reserve auction with n +1 bidders is more profitable than an optimal auction (and hence optimal mechanism) with n bidders week 12 19 Auctions vs. Negotiations, con’t Optimal reserve, n bidders: 1 v* M (v) dF (v) n No reserve, n+1 bidders 1 0 week 12 M (v) dF (v) n1 20 E[ M (v)] 0 Auctions vs. Negotiations, con’t Facts: 1 v* M (v) dF (v) n E[max{ M (v1 ),..., M (vn ),0}] 1 M (v) dF (v) n1 0 E[ M (v)] 0 week 12 E[max{ M (v1 ),...,M (vn1 )}] … QED 21 Bidder rings (Graham & Marshall 87) Stylized facts 1) They exist and are stable 2) They eliminate competition among ring members; yet ensure ring member with highest value is not undercut 3) Benefits shared by ring members 4) Have open membership 5) Auctioneer responds strategically 6) Try to hide their existence week 12 22 Bidder rings Graham & Marshall’s model: Second-price preauction knockout (PAKT) i. IPV, risk neutral ii. Value distributions F, common knowledge iii. Identity of winner & price paid common knowledge iv. Membership of ring known only to ring members week 12 23 Bidder rings Pre-auction knock-out (PAKT): 1) Appoint ring center, who pays P to each ring member, P to be determined below 2) Each ring member submits a sealed bid to the ring center 3) Winner is advised to submit her winning bid at main auction; other ring members submit only meaningless bids 4) If the winner at the sub-auction (subwinner) also wins main auction, she pays: week 12 24 Bidder rings If sub-winner wins main auction, she pays: o Main auctioneer P* = SP at main auction o Ring center δ = max{ P̃ − P* , 0 }, where P̃ = SP in PAKT Thus: If the sub-winner wins main auction, she pays SP among all bids week 12 25 Bidder rings The quantity δ is the amount “stolen” from the main auctioneer, the “booty” The ring center receives and distributes E[δ | sub-winner wins main auction] so his budget is balanced Each ring member receives P = E[δ | sub-winner wins main auction]/K week 12 26 Bidder rings Graham and Marshall prove: 1) Truthful bidding in the PAKT, and following the recommendation of the ring center is SBNE & weakly dominant strategy (incentive compatible) 2) Voluntary participation is advantageous (individually rational) 3) Efficient (buyer with highest value gets item) In fact, the whole thing is equivalent to a Vickrey auction week 12 27 Bidder rings Main auctioneer responds strategically by increasing reserves or shill-bidding Graham& Marshall also prove that 1. Optimal main reserve is an increasing function of ring size K 2. Expected surplus of ring member is a decreasing function of reserve prices 3. Expected surplus of ring member is an increasing function of ring size K So best to be secretive week 12 28 Term papers due 5pm Tuesday May 13 (Dean’s Date) Email me for office hours re term papers week 12 29