An Agent who owns information that is potentially valuable to a Firm bargains for its sale, without commitment and certification possibilities, short of disclosing it. We propose a model of gradual persuasion and show how gradualism helps mitigate the hold-up problem (that the Firm would not pay once it learns the information). An example illustrates how it is optimal to give away part of the information at the beginning of the bargaining, and sell the remainder in dribs and drabs. The Agent can only appropriate part of the value of information. Introducing a third-party allows her to extract the maximum surplus
We characterize the revenue-maximizing information structure in the second price auction. The seller...
This paper, in a Shapley-Shubik market game framework, examines the effect of "leakage" of informati...
Imagine that you are considering an investment in a new public offering of a firm's shares. The firm...
We study a dynamic buyer-seller problem in which the good is information and there are no property r...
We characterize optimal selling protocols/equilibria of a game in which an Agent first puts hidden eff...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
We consider a revenue-maximizing seller who, before proposing a mechanism to sell her object(s), ob...
We consider a revenue-maximizing seller who, before proposing a mechanism to sell her object(s), ob...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
This paper introduces a model of sweet talk in which a seller may acquire verifiable information and...
This paper introduces a model of sweet talk in which a seller may acquire verifiable information and...
We characterize the revenue-maximizing information structure in the second price auction. The seller...
This paper, in a Shapley-Shubik market game framework, examines the effect of "leakage" of informati...
Imagine that you are considering an investment in a new public offering of a firm's shares. The firm...
We study a dynamic buyer-seller problem in which the good is information and there are no property r...
We characterize optimal selling protocols/equilibria of a game in which an Agent first puts hidden eff...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
The acquisition of information prior to sale gives rise to a hold-up situation quite naturally. Yet,...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
We consider a revenue-maximizing seller who, before proposing a mechanism to sell her object(s), ob...
We consider a revenue-maximizing seller who, before proposing a mechanism to sell her object(s), ob...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
This paper introduces a model of sweet talk in which a seller may acquire verifiable information and...
This paper introduces a model of sweet talk in which a seller may acquire verifiable information and...
We characterize the revenue-maximizing information structure in the second price auction. The seller...
This paper, in a Shapley-Shubik market game framework, examines the effect of "leakage" of informati...
Imagine that you are considering an investment in a new public offering of a firm's shares. The firm...