Hidden Reserve Prices with Risk-Averse Bidders

Kevin X. D. Huang, Guoqiang Tian, Yibo Yang

Author information




a GE Capital, 201 High Ridge Rd., Stamford, CT 06905, USA; Sycamore Investment Services (Shanghai) Limited, Shanghai, China

b Department of Economics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0253, USA

E-mail: hugh.li@ge.com,%20hugh.li@sycamoreinvest.com (Huagang Li), guofutan@usc.edu (Guofu Tan)

Abstract




In this paper, we provide an alternative explanation for why auctioneers often keep the reserve price hidden or secret. We consider a standard independent private values environment in which the buyers are risk-averse and the seller has private information about her valuation of the object to be auctioned. The seller uses a first-price sealed-bid auction mechanism combined with either an announced reserve price or a hidden reserve price. We compare the sellers ex ante expected profits under these two policies and find that the optimal hidden reserve price policy generates higher expected profits for the seller when the buyers are fairly risk-averse under particular restrictions on buyerspreferences and the distributions of private values. As the number of the buyers increases, the hidden reserve price is more likely to dominate. Numerical methods are used to demonstrate the generality of our main results.

 Keywords




first-price auctions, hidden reserve price, risk aversion 

Cite this article




Huagang Li, Guofu Tan. Hidden Reserve Prices with Risk-Averse Bidders. Front. Econ. China, 2017, 12(3): 341‒370 https://doi.org/10.3868/s060-006-017-0015-4 


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