Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
883897 Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 2012 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Many auctions are followed by a resale market which occurs when the winner of the auction resells the item won to one of the participants from the original auction. The existence of such transactions may initially appear counter intuitive. However, this paper will show that active inter-bidder resale results from payoff maximizing decisions in the auction that take into account the incentives of a resale opportunity. Specifically, I examine how the existence of an inter-bidder resale opportunity impacts bidder behavior in an English clock auction, and to what extent altering the bargaining power of the final buyer and reseller in the resale market determines the strategies followed in the initial auction, in an attempt to understand the existence of these inter-bidder transactions. Theoretical and behavioral analysis is used to develop hypotheses of speculation (bidding above value) and demand reduction (bidding below value) which are directly tested in a controlled experimental setting. While value bidding is a dominant strategy in a standard English clock auction without resale, when resale is allowed, this theoretical claim is weaker. Demand reduction is observed when the bargaining power is shifted to the final buyer in resale and when the bargaining power is shifted toward the reseller, speculation is observed. The revenue achieved in the initial auction depends on the behavior observed in the auction. Regardless of bargaining power, revenue is shown to decrease below what would have been earned in an English auction without resale due to demand reduction. When the reseller has the bargaining power, and speculation is observed, this loss in revenue is somewhat mitigated by increased speculation.

► I test the implications of adding a secondary resale market to an English auction. ► Active resale after an auction cannot be explained by bidder confusion. ► In the auction, bidders respond to the bargaining power of the resale market. ► A strong bargaining position held by the resale buyer leads to demand reduction. ► A strong bargaining position held by the reseller leads to speculation.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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