Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

skip to main content
10.1145/2482540.2482567acmconferencesArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PagesecConference Proceedingsconference-collections
extended-abstract

A dynamic axiomatic approach to first-price auctions

Published: 25 October 2018 Publication History

Abstract

The first-price auction is popular in practice for its simplicity and transparency. Moreover, its potential virtues grow in complex settings where incentive compatible auctions may generate little or no revenue. Unfortunately, the first-price auction is poorly understood in theory because equilibrium is not a priori a credible predictor of bidder behavior.
We take a dynamic approach to studying first-price auctions: rather than basing performance guarantees solely on static equilibria, we study the repeated setting and show that robust performance guarantees may be derived from simple axioms of bidder behavior. For example, as long as a loser raises her bid quickly, a standard first-price auction will generate at least as much revenue as a second-price auction.
We generalize this dynamic technique to complex pay-your-bid auction settings: as long as losers do not wait too long to raise bids, a first-price auction will reach an envy-free state that implies a strong lower-bound on revenue; as long as winners occasionally experiment by lowering their bids, the outcome will near the boundary of this envy-free set so bidders do not overpay; and when players with the largest payoffs are the least patient, bids converge to the egalitarian equilibrium. Significantly, bidders need only know whether they are winning or losing in order to implement such behavior.
Along the way, we find that the auctioneer's choice of bidding language is critical when generalizing beyond the single-item setting, and we propose a specific construction called the utility-target auction that performs well. The utility-target auction includes a bidder's final utility as an additional parameter, identifying the single dimension along which she wishes to compete. This auction is closely related to profit-target bidding in first-price and ascending proxy package auctions and gives strong revenue guarantees for a variety of complex auction environments. Of particular interest, the guaranteed existence of a pure-strategy equilibrium in the utility-target auction shows how Overture might have eliminated the cyclic behavior in their generalized first-price sponsored search auction if bidders could have placed more sophisticated bids.

References

[1]
Kenneth J. Arrow, H. D. Block, and Leonid Hurwicz. On the stability of the competitive equilibrium, ii. Econometrica, 27(1):82--109, 1959.
[2]
Itai Ashlagi, Mark Braverman, Avinatan Hassidim, Ron Lavi, and Moshe Tennenholtz. Position auctions with budgets: Existence and uniqueness. working paper, 2010.
[3]
Lawrence M. Ausubel and Paul Milgrom. The lovely but lonely vickrey auction. In Combinatorial Auctions, chapter 1. MIT Press, 2006.
[4]
Venkatesh Bala and Mukul Majumdar. Chaotic tatonnement. Economic Theory, 2(4):437--45, October 1992.
[5]
B. Douglas Bernheim and Michael D. Whinston. Menu Auctions, Resource Allocation, and Economic Influence. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, CI(1), 1986.
[6]
Richard Cole and Lisa Fleischer. Fast-converging tatonnement algorithms for one-time and ongoing market problems. In STOC '08: Proceedings of the 40th annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing, pages 315--324, New York, NY, USA, 2008. ACM.
[7]
Robert Day and Paul Milgrom. Core-selecting package auctions. International Journal of Game Theory, 36(3--4):393--407, July 2007.
[8]
Benjamin Edelman and Michael Ostrovsky. Strategic bidder behavior in sponsored search auctions. Decision Support Systems, 43(1):192--198, 2007.
[9]
Benjamin Edelman, Michael Ostrovsky, and Michael Schwarz. Internet advertising and the generalized second-price auction: Selling billions of dollars worth of keywords. American Economic Review, 97(1):242--259, March 2007.
[10]
Benjamin Edelman and Michael Schwarz. Optimal auction design and equilibrium selection in sponsored search auctions, 2010.
[11]
Richard Engelbrecht-Wiggans and Charles M. Kahn. Multi-unit pay-your-bid auctions with variable awards. Games and Economic Behavior, 23(1):25 -- 42, 1998.
[12]
Eyal Even-dar, Yishay Mansour, and Uri Nadav. On the convergence of regret minimization dynamics in concave games. In STOC '09: Proceedings of the 41st annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing, pages 523--532, New York, NY, USA, 2009. ACM.
[13]
Glenn W. Harrison. Theory and misbehavior of first-price auctions. The American Economic Review, 79(4):pp. 749--762, 1989.
[14]
Sergiu Hart and Andreu Mas-Colell. A simple adaptive procedure leading to correlated equilibrium. Econometrica, 68(5):1127--1150, 2000.
[15]
Sergiu Hart and Noam Nisan. The menu-size complexity of auctions, 2012.
[16]
Jason D. Hartline and Tim Roughgarden. Simple versus optimal mechanisms. In Proceedings of the 10th ACM conference on Electronic commerce, EC '09, pages 225--234, New York, NY, USA, 2009. ACM.
[17]
Darrell Hoy, Kamal Jain, and Christopher A. Wilkens. Coopetitive ad auctions. arXiv, abs/1209.0832, 2012.
[18]
Paul Klemperer. What really matters in auction design. The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 16(1):pp. 169--189, 2002.
[19]
Renato Paes Leme, Vasilis Syrgkanis, and Éva Tardos. Sequential auctions and externalities. In Proceedings of the Twenty-Third Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, SODA '12, pages 869--886. SIAM, 2012.
[20]
David Lucking-Reiley. Vickrey auctions in practice: From nineteenth-century philately to twenty-first-century e-commerce. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 14(3):183--192, September 2000.
[21]
Eric Maskin and John Riley. Asymmetric auctions. The Review of Economic Studies, 67(3):pp. 413--438, 2000.
[22]
P. Milgrom. Putting Auction Theory to Work. Churchill Lectures in Economics. Cambridge University Press, 2004.
[23]
Paul Milgrom. Putting auction theory to work: The simulteneous ascending auction. Journal of Political Economy, 108(2):pp. 245--272, 2000.
[24]
Paul Milgrom and John Roberts. Adaptive and sophisticated learning in normal form games. Games and Economic Behavior, 3(1):82--100, 1991.
[25]
Kevin Roberts. The characterization of implementable social choice rules. In Aggretaion and Revelation of Preferences, J-J.Laffont (ed.), North Holland Publishing Company., 1979.
[26]
Tim Roughgarden and Éva Tardos. Do externalities degrade gsp's efficiency? In The Eighth Ad Auctions Workshop, 2012.
[27]
Paul A. Samuelson. The stability of equilibrium: Comparative statics and dynamics. Econometrica, 9(2):97--120, 1941.
[28]
William Vickrey. Counterspeculation, auctions, and competitive sealed tenders. The Journal of Finance, 16(1):8--37, 1961.
[29]
Leon Walras. Elements of pure economics, or, The theory of social wealth / Leon Walras; translated by William Jaffe. Published for the American Economic Association and the Royal Economic Society by Allen and Unwin, London :, 1954.
[30]
Christopher A. Wilkens and Balasubramanian Sivan. Single-call mechanisms. In Proceedings of the 13th ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce, EC '12, pages 946--963, New York, NY, USA, 2012. ACM.

Cited By

View all
  • (2022)Auctions between Regret-Minimizing AgentsProceedings of the ACM Web Conference 202210.1145/3485447.3512055(100-111)Online publication date: 25-Apr-2022
  • (2017)Sponsored Search Auctions with Rich AdsProceedings of the 26th International Conference on World Wide Web10.1145/3038912.3052703(43-51)Online publication date: 3-Apr-2017
  • (2014)Expressiveness and robustness of first-price position auctionsProceedings of the fifteenth ACM conference on Economics and computation10.1145/2600057.2602846(57-74)Online publication date: 1-Jun-2014

Index Terms

  1. A dynamic axiomatic approach to first-price auctions

    Recommendations

    Comments

    Please enable JavaScript to view thecomments powered by Disqus.

    Information & Contributors

    Information

    Published In

    cover image ACM Conferences
    EC '13: Proceedings of the fourteenth ACM conference on Electronic commerce
    June 2013
    924 pages
    ISBN:9781450319621
    DOI:10.1145/2492002

    Sponsors

    Publisher

    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 25 October 2018

    Permissions

    Request permissions for this article.

    Check for updates

    Author Tags

    1. auctions
    2. dynamic auctions
    3. first-price auctions
    4. utility-target auctions

    Qualifiers

    • Extended-abstract

    Conference

    EC '13
    Sponsor:
    EC '13: ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce
    June 16 - 20, 2013
    Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA

    Acceptance Rates

    EC '13 Paper Acceptance Rate 72 of 223 submissions, 32%;
    Overall Acceptance Rate 664 of 2,389 submissions, 28%

    Contributors

    Other Metrics

    Bibliometrics & Citations

    Bibliometrics

    Article Metrics

    • Downloads (Last 12 months)1
    • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)0
    Reflects downloads up to 16 Nov 2024

    Other Metrics

    Citations

    Cited By

    View all
    • (2022)Auctions between Regret-Minimizing AgentsProceedings of the ACM Web Conference 202210.1145/3485447.3512055(100-111)Online publication date: 25-Apr-2022
    • (2017)Sponsored Search Auctions with Rich AdsProceedings of the 26th International Conference on World Wide Web10.1145/3038912.3052703(43-51)Online publication date: 3-Apr-2017
    • (2014)Expressiveness and robustness of first-price position auctionsProceedings of the fifteenth ACM conference on Economics and computation10.1145/2600057.2602846(57-74)Online publication date: 1-Jun-2014

    View Options

    Login options

    View options

    PDF

    View or Download as a PDF file.

    PDF

    eReader

    View online with eReader.

    eReader

    Media

    Figures

    Other

    Tables

    Share

    Share

    Share this Publication link

    Share on social media