Abstract

Activity rules have emerged in recent years as an important aspect of practical auction design. The role of an activity rule in an iterative auction is to suppress strategic behavior by bidders and promote simple, continual, meaningful bidding and thus, price discovery. These rules find application in the design of iterative combinatorial auctions for real world scenarios, for example in spectrum auctions, in airline landing slot auctions, and in procurement auctions. We introduce the notion of strong activity rules, which allow simple, consistent bidding strategies while precluding all behaviors that cannot be rationalized in this way. We design such a rule for auctions with budget-constrained bidders, i.e., bidders with valuations for resources that are greater than their ability to pay. Such bidders are of practical importance in many market environments, and hindered from bidding in a simple and consistent way by the commonly used revealed-preference activity rule, which is too strong in such an environment. We consider issues of complexity, and provide two useful forms of information feedback to guide bidders in meeting strong activity rules. As a special case, we derive a strong activity rule for non-budget-constrained bidders. The ultimate choice of activity rule must depend, in part, on beliefs about the types of bidders likely to participate in an auction event because one cannot have a rule that is simultaneously strong for both budget-constrained bidders and quasi-linear bidders.

Highlights

  • Combinatorial auctions provide a means of auctioning several related items, allowing bidders to place bids on packages of items rather than individual items

  • Day [36] has previously considered the role of activity rules in the presence of budget constraints, and provides a rule that extends revealed preference activity rule (RPAR) but is not strong in our sense, because it still allows for some non straightforward bidding

  • Activity rules are important in practical auction design because they promote price discovery through simple, consistent bidding by auction participants

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Summary

Introduction

Combinatorial auctions provide a means of auctioning several related items, allowing bidders to place bids on packages of items rather than individual items. We compare RPAR against our strong activity rule for budget-constrained bidders in the clock-proxy auction [5] This auction is advocated for practical settings such as the FCC wireless spectrum auctions, and consists of an ascendingprice combinatorial clock auction phase that terminates with a “last-and-final” round in which bidders submit additional bids before the auction transitions to a sealed-bid (proxy) auction phase. Day [36] has previously considered the role of activity rules in the presence of budget constraints, and provides a rule that extends RPAR but is not strong in our sense, because it still allows for some non straightforward bidding (both with and without budget-constrained bidders.)

Strong Activity Rules
Monotonicity and Revealed-Preference Activity Rules
Designing Strong Activity Rules and Bidder Feedback
Providing Bidder Feedback
Experimental Simulations
Concluding Remarks
Full Text
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