Many commodities (including energy, agricultural products and metals) are sold both on spot markets and through long-term contracts which commit the parties to exchange the commodity in each of a number of spot market trading periods. This paper shows how the length of forward contracts affects the possibility of collusion in a repeated pricesetting game. We find that as the duration of contracts increases, collusion becomes harder to sustain. Nevertheless, firms with low discount factors that would not be able to sustain collusion without contracts, can always sustain some collusive prices above marginal cost, provided that they sell enough contracts. Hence long-term contracts have an ambiguous impact on collusion. Such ambiguity is due to...
In the context of an infinitely repeated oligopoly game, we study collusion among firms that simulta...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
This survey introduces a number of game-theoretic tools to model collusive agreements among firms in...
It has long been argued that long-term contracts enhance competition, but the repeated nature of man...
In a repeated price game with long but finitely-lived consumers, long-term contracts facilitate coll...
It has long been argued that long-term contracts enhance compe-tition, but the repeated nature of ma...
It has been argued that having a contract market before the spot market enhances competition (Allaz ...
We consider an infinitely-repeated oligopoly in which at each period firms not only serve the spot m...
Abstract. This paper proposes a general framework to study the sustainability of collusion in market...
This paper studies the effect of forward contracts on the stability of collusion among firms, compet...
The impact of demand growth on the collusion possibilities is investigated in a Cournot supergame wh...
In a repeated price game with long but finitely-lived consumers, the use of staggered long-term cont...
We consider an infinitely-repeated oligopoly in which at each period firms not only serve the spot m...
This Article uses the techniques of modern decision analysis and game theory to analyze the decision...
This article investigates downstream firms' ability to collude in a repeated game of competition bet...
In the context of an infinitely repeated oligopoly game, we study collusion among firms that simulta...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
This survey introduces a number of game-theoretic tools to model collusive agreements among firms in...
It has long been argued that long-term contracts enhance competition, but the repeated nature of man...
In a repeated price game with long but finitely-lived consumers, long-term contracts facilitate coll...
It has long been argued that long-term contracts enhance compe-tition, but the repeated nature of ma...
It has been argued that having a contract market before the spot market enhances competition (Allaz ...
We consider an infinitely-repeated oligopoly in which at each period firms not only serve the spot m...
Abstract. This paper proposes a general framework to study the sustainability of collusion in market...
This paper studies the effect of forward contracts on the stability of collusion among firms, compet...
The impact of demand growth on the collusion possibilities is investigated in a Cournot supergame wh...
In a repeated price game with long but finitely-lived consumers, the use of staggered long-term cont...
We consider an infinitely-repeated oligopoly in which at each period firms not only serve the spot m...
This Article uses the techniques of modern decision analysis and game theory to analyze the decision...
This article investigates downstream firms' ability to collude in a repeated game of competition bet...
In the context of an infinitely repeated oligopoly game, we study collusion among firms that simulta...
In an infinitely repeated game where market demand is uncertain and where firms with (possibly asymm...
This survey introduces a number of game-theoretic tools to model collusive agreements among firms in...