This paper analyzes an auction in which bidders see independent components of a common prize value. The Nash equilibrium for two rational bidders is shown to be independent of risk attitudes. The information structure allows explicit calculation of an alternative equilibrium in which naive bidders do not correctly discount the value of the prize, contingent on winning, and thus they suffer the winner’s curse. Subjects in a laboratory experiment clearly fall prey to the winner’s curse; the data conform most closely to the predictions of the naive model. Moreover, the level of risk aversion implied by fitting the naive model is quite similar to an independent risk aversion measure obtained in a separate (private-value) bidding exercise
Experiments on first-price sealed-bid auctions with independent private values have shown that submi...
Abstract: In this paper I develop a Prospect theory based model to explain bidding in first-price au...
This paper proposes a structural nonequilibrium model of initial responses to incomplete-information...
We report the results of a series of second-price auction experiments where each bidder's signal is ...
Abstract: We investigate experimentally a possible Winner’s Curse in a generalized environment with ...
There is evidence that bidders fall prey to the winner's curse because they fail to extract informat...
Contains fulltext : 198270.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Bidding above...
We analyze the bidding behavior of expectations-based loss-averse bidders in auctions with interdep...
Bidding above the risk-neutral Nash equilibrium in first price sealed bid auctions has traditionally...
Bidding above the risk-neutral Nash equilibrium in first price sealed bid auctions has traditionally...
We study in the laboratory a series of first price sealed bid auctions of a common value good. Bidde...
We analyze bidding behavior in auctions when risk-averse buyers bid for a good whose value is risky....
We analyse bidding behaviour in auctions when risk-averse buyers bid for a good whose value is risky...
Why do bidders tend to bid higher than the risk-neutral Nash equilibrium in sealed-bid first price a...
This paper proposes a structural non-equilibrium model of initial responses to incomplete-informatio...
Experiments on first-price sealed-bid auctions with independent private values have shown that submi...
Abstract: In this paper I develop a Prospect theory based model to explain bidding in first-price au...
This paper proposes a structural nonequilibrium model of initial responses to incomplete-information...
We report the results of a series of second-price auction experiments where each bidder's signal is ...
Abstract: We investigate experimentally a possible Winner’s Curse in a generalized environment with ...
There is evidence that bidders fall prey to the winner's curse because they fail to extract informat...
Contains fulltext : 198270.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Bidding above...
We analyze the bidding behavior of expectations-based loss-averse bidders in auctions with interdep...
Bidding above the risk-neutral Nash equilibrium in first price sealed bid auctions has traditionally...
Bidding above the risk-neutral Nash equilibrium in first price sealed bid auctions has traditionally...
We study in the laboratory a series of first price sealed bid auctions of a common value good. Bidde...
We analyze bidding behavior in auctions when risk-averse buyers bid for a good whose value is risky....
We analyse bidding behaviour in auctions when risk-averse buyers bid for a good whose value is risky...
Why do bidders tend to bid higher than the risk-neutral Nash equilibrium in sealed-bid first price a...
This paper proposes a structural non-equilibrium model of initial responses to incomplete-informatio...
Experiments on first-price sealed-bid auctions with independent private values have shown that submi...
Abstract: In this paper I develop a Prospect theory based model to explain bidding in first-price au...
This paper proposes a structural nonequilibrium model of initial responses to incomplete-information...