Sorry Winners |
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Authors: | Marco Pagnozzi |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Economics and CSEF, Università di Napoli Federico II, Via Cintia (Monte S. Angelo), Napoli, 80126, Italy |
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Abstract: | Bidders who receive both “common-value” and “private-value” signals about the value of an auction prize cannot fully infer their opponents’ information from the bidding. So bidders may overestimate the value of the prize and, subsequently, regret winning. When multiple objects are on sale, bidding in an auction provides information relevant to the other auctions, and sequential auctions are more vulnerable to overpayment and winners’ regret than are simultaneous auctions. With information inequality among bidders, the seller’s revenue is influenced by two contrasting effects. On the one hand, simultaneous auctions reduce the winner’s curse of less informed bidders and allow them to bid more aggressively. On the other hand, sequential auctions induce less informed bidders to bid more aggressively in early auctions to acquire information. |
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Keywords: | asymmetric bidders auctions overpayment |
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