Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
553391 | Decision Support Systems | 2006 | 17 Pages |
Considerable research discusses the advantages and disadvantages of combinatorial auctions. This study addresses a disadvantage, the loss of price discovery for the individual items sold as bundles. Prior studies confirm that there may not be a unique unit-level equilibrium price. We claim a distribution of prices satisfy a given allocation and describe a technique to determine these distributions. Gibbs Sampling allows us to discover characteristics of combinatorial auctions based on the allocated bids. We extract the market-influenced unit-level price, bidder profit, reservation discount distributions and are able to find patterns that depict synergies between products. The posterior distribution provides insights useful to managerial decision making.