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“Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it.”

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Presentation on theme: "“Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it.”"— Presentation transcript:

1 “Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it.”
Game Theory Mike Shor Lecture 12 “Everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it.” - Publilius Syrus (Maxim 847, 42 B.C.)

2 Sources of Uncertainty
Private Value Auction Difficult to lose money Do not bid more than your value (or less than your cost) Common Value Auction The item has a single though unknown value Bidders differ in their estimates The winner might be wrong! Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

3 Common Value Auctions Example: Offshore oil leases
Value of oil is roughly the same for every participant No bidder knows value for sure Each bidder has some information Auction formats are not equivalent Oral auctions provide information Sealed-bid auctions do not Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

4 Hypothetical Oil Field Auction
1 2 3 4 5 Bidder 1 Bidder 2 Bidder 3 Bidder 4 6 7 8 9 10 10 tracts for sale each with four bidders Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

5 Hypothetical Oil Field Auction
Bidder 1 Bidder 2 Bidder 3 Bidder 4 Each tract has four bidders Each bidder knows the amount of oil in his or her quadrant Each quarter’s value is evenly distributed between $200,000 and $800,000 Total value of oil field: Sum of the values of the four quarters Type of auction: First price sealed bid Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

6 Oil Field Auction How much do you bid? Mike Shor
Game Theory & Business Strategy

7 The Winner’s Curse $60 $40 $70 $50 $80 $60
The estimates are correct, on average Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

8 Avoiding the Winner’s Curse
Given that I win an auction … All others bid less than me … Thus the object’s value must be lower than I thought Winning the auction is “bad news” One must incorporate this into one’s bid Assume that your estimate is the most optimistic Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

9 Avoiding the Winner’s Curse
COMMANDMENT The expected value of the object is irrelevant. To bid: Consider only the value of the object if you win! Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

10 Avoiding the Winner’s Curse
Bidding for a company of uncertain value Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

11 Avoiding the Winner’s Curse
Bidding with no regrets: Since winning means you have the most optimistic signal, always bid as if you have the highest signal If your estimate is the most optimistic – what is the object worth? Use that as the basis of your bid Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

12 Private or Common Value?
Most Auctions are not purely private value or purely common value Private Value Resale component (art) Reputation / conspicuous consumption Public Value Differing abilities (mining) Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

13 Multi-Unit Auctions What if you have multiple items to sell?
Depends on whether the items are … Independent in value Dependent on each other Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

14 Independent Multi-Unit
Multiple works of art May be auctioned off separately Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

15 Dependent Multi-Unit PCS Spectrum Auctions (FCC) Design of combinatorial auctions is very complicated Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

16 Extra Low Frequency (ELF) LF HF UHF EHF MF VHF SHF
Infrared Visible Ultraviolet XRay Gamma Cosmic Ray Ray 3 x 10-8 m / 0 Hz 3 x 10-7 Å / 1025 Hz Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy

17 Summary Average value of an object is irrelevant
Consider only the value if you win In common value auctions, assume that you have the most optimistic estimate Mike Shor Game Theory & Business Strategy


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