We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize higher value. Sellers are able to avoid entering into negotiations with the buyer, so that the order in which they negotiate is endogenous. Holdout occurs if at least one of the sellers is not present in the first round of negotiations. We demonstrate that complementarity of the buyer’s technology is a necessary condition for equilibrium holdout. Moreover, a rise in complementarity leads to an increased likelihood of holdout, and an increased efficiency loss. Applications include patents, the land assembly problem, and mergers
In a recent article, Lyon and Rasmusen (2004) argue that buyer-option contracts are more effective a...
Many real world transactions occur in a common agency environment in which an agent interacts with s...
In an environment in which heterogeneous buyers and sellers undertake ex ante investments, the prese...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
This article characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or...
This paper characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or ...
A holdout problem arises when a disparately-owned good is desired by a prospective buyer only in its...
Suppose a developer wants to buy n adjacent blocks of land that are currently in the possession of n...
This paper studies a non-cooperative bargaining problem with one buyer and many sellers, focussing o...
The holdout problem is commonly cited as the justification for eminent domain, but the nature of the...
The Colombian government’s recent efforts to aggregate land for housing and infrastructure have run ...
A holdup model is analyzed in which one party, the seller, has an investment project that the other ...
We examine the problem of a buyer who wishes to purchase and combine n objects owned by n individual...
In a recent article, Lyon and Rasmusen (2004) argue that buyer-option contracts are more effective a...
Many real world transactions occur in a common agency environment in which an agent interacts with s...
In an environment in which heterogeneous buyers and sellers undertake ex ante investments, the prese...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
We model a buyer who wishes to combine objects owned by two separate sellers in order to realize hig...
This article characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or...
This paper characterizes the conditions under which holdout (i.e. bargaining inefficiency) may, or ...
A holdout problem arises when a disparately-owned good is desired by a prospective buyer only in its...
Suppose a developer wants to buy n adjacent blocks of land that are currently in the possession of n...
This paper studies a non-cooperative bargaining problem with one buyer and many sellers, focussing o...
The holdout problem is commonly cited as the justification for eminent domain, but the nature of the...
The Colombian government’s recent efforts to aggregate land for housing and infrastructure have run ...
A holdup model is analyzed in which one party, the seller, has an investment project that the other ...
We examine the problem of a buyer who wishes to purchase and combine n objects owned by n individual...
In a recent article, Lyon and Rasmusen (2004) argue that buyer-option contracts are more effective a...
Many real world transactions occur in a common agency environment in which an agent interacts with s...
In an environment in which heterogeneous buyers and sellers undertake ex ante investments, the prese...