We consider auctions where bidders care about the reputational effects of their bidding and argue that the amount of information disclosed at the end of the auction will influence bidding. We focus on bid disclosure rules that capture all of the realistic cases. We show that bidders distort their bidding in a way that conforms to stylized facts about takeovers/licence auctions. We rank the disclosure rules in terms of their expected revenues and find that, under certain conditions, full disclosure will not be optimal. First‐price and second‐price auctions with price disclosure are not revenue equivalent and we rank them.<br/
Employing a procedure suggested by a simple theoretical model of auctions in which bidders and selle...
We consider a single-item, independent private value auction environment with two bidders: a leader,...
We consider auctions where bidders have external incentives and focus on the case where their valuat...
We consider auctions where bidders care about the reputational effects of their bidding and argue th...
This paper studies the two-way interactions between license auctions and post-bid market competition...
We analyze how voluntary disclosure of information by bidders affects the outcome of optimally desig...
One of the central issues in auction design is how much information should be disclosed to bidders. ...
We analyze how voluntary disclosure of information by bidders affects the outcome of optimally desig...
Theoretical models document the superiority of auctions vis-à-vis negotiations in takeovers. However...
Abstract We consider a single-item, independent private value auction environment with two bidders:...
This paper asks whether revealing the identity of dropping bidders is in the interest of the auction...
Previous work has addressed the relative vulnerability of different auction schemes to collusive bid...
We characterise properties of optimal auctions if the seller may disclose information about the qual...
We investigate the role of market transparency in repeated first-price auctions. We consider a setti...
In the framework of a first-price private-value auction, we study the seller as a player in a game w...
Employing a procedure suggested by a simple theoretical model of auctions in which bidders and selle...
We consider a single-item, independent private value auction environment with two bidders: a leader,...
We consider auctions where bidders have external incentives and focus on the case where their valuat...
We consider auctions where bidders care about the reputational effects of their bidding and argue th...
This paper studies the two-way interactions between license auctions and post-bid market competition...
We analyze how voluntary disclosure of information by bidders affects the outcome of optimally desig...
One of the central issues in auction design is how much information should be disclosed to bidders. ...
We analyze how voluntary disclosure of information by bidders affects the outcome of optimally desig...
Theoretical models document the superiority of auctions vis-à-vis negotiations in takeovers. However...
Abstract We consider a single-item, independent private value auction environment with two bidders:...
This paper asks whether revealing the identity of dropping bidders is in the interest of the auction...
Previous work has addressed the relative vulnerability of different auction schemes to collusive bid...
We characterise properties of optimal auctions if the seller may disclose information about the qual...
We investigate the role of market transparency in repeated first-price auctions. We consider a setti...
In the framework of a first-price private-value auction, we study the seller as a player in a game w...
Employing a procedure suggested by a simple theoretical model of auctions in which bidders and selle...
We consider a single-item, independent private value auction environment with two bidders: a leader,...
We consider auctions where bidders have external incentives and focus on the case where their valuat...