Abstract

We analyze the bidding behavior of expectations-based loss-averse bidders in auctions with interdependent values. We emphasize the difference between the risk bidders face over whether they win the auction (extensive risk) and the risk they face over the value of the prize conditional on winning (intensive risk). The extensive risk creates an “attachment” effect, whereas the intensive risk operates via a “comparison” effect. How loss-averse bidders react to these different risks depends on whether they incorporate their bid into their reference point. Under “unacclimating personal equilibrium” (UPE), where bidders keep their expectations fixed when choosing their bids, both the extensive and intensive risks induce them to bid more aggressively. Moreover, bidders are exposed to the “winner’s curse” and a seller can attain higher revenue by hiding information in order to leverage the intensive risk. By contrast, under “choice-acclimating personal equilibrium” (CPE), where a bid determines both the reference lottery and the outcome lottery, the intensive risk creates a “precautionary bidding” effect that pushes bidders to behave less aggressively; whether this effect is reinforced or undermined by the extensive risk depends on a bidder’s likelihood of winning the auction. Furthermore, bidders are less aggressive than under UPE and can be subject to a “loser’s curse.” Yet, by committing to bidding less aggressively, such as by engaging in proxy bidding, loss-averse bidders are better off under CPE than UPE. This paper was accepted by Ilia Tsetlin, decision analysis.

Highlights

  • In many auctions, the value of the good for sale is subject to ex post risk, and bidders will learn its true value only after the auction is over

  • As shown by Lange and Ratan (2010), Banerji and Gupta (2014), Eisenhuth (2019), Rosato (2019), Rosato and Tymula (2019), and von Wangenheim (2017), expectations-based loss aversion has important implications for auction design. Whereas these previous contributions have focused solely on auctions with private values, our paper is the first to study the role of expectations-based loss aversion in auctions with interdependent values

  • Our analysis highlights how the behavior of loss-averse bidders depends on how they react to the extensive and intensive risk, which in turn depends on the extent to which bidders incorporate their bid into their reference point

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Summary

Introduction

The value of the good for sale is subject to ex post risk, and bidders will learn its true value only after the auction is over. The SPA always entails intensive risk in the payment for both private and interdependent values; yet, if values are interdependent, both the SPA and FPA expose bidders to additional intensive risk in consumption While both the extensive and intensive risk in money unambiguously lower equilibrium bids, in the consumption dimension, the effect of these two risks depends on the extent to which loss-averse bidders incorporate their bid into their reference point. In both formats, the extensive risk in consumption creates an “attachment” effect that pushes loss-averse bidders to bid more aggressively compared with the riskneutral benchmark. Our paper is the first to study the implications of expectations-based loss aversion in auctions with interdependent values

The Model
Solution Concepts
An Illustrative Example
First-Price Auctions
Choice-Acclimating Personal Equilibrium
Second-Price Auctions
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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