First Price Auction
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A first-price sealed-bid auction (FPSBA) is a common type of
auction An auction is usually a process of buying and selling goods or services by offering them up for bids, taking bids, and then selling the item to the highest bidder or buying the item from the lowest bidder. Some exceptions to this definition e ...
. It is also known as blind auction. In this type of auction, all bidders simultaneously submit sealed bids so that no bidder knows the bid of any other participant. The highest bidder pays the price that was submitted.


Strategic analysis

In a FPSBA, each bidder is characterized by their monetary valuation of the item for sale. Suppose Alice is a bidder and her valuation is a. Then, if Alice is rational: *She will never bid more than a, because bidding more than a can only make her lose net value. *If she bids exactly a, then she will not lose but also not gain any positive value. *If she bids less than a, then she ''may'' have some positive gain, but the exact gain depends on the bids of the others. Alice would like to bid the smallest amount that can make her win the item, as long as this amount is less than a. For example, if there is another bidder Bob and he bids y and y, then Alice would like to bid y+\varepsilon (where \varepsilon is the smallest amount that can be added, e.g. one cent). Unfortunately, Alice does not know what the other bidders are going to bid. Moreover, she does not even know the valuations of the other bidders. Hence, strategically, we have a
Bayesian game In game theory, a Bayesian game is a game that models the outcome of player interactions using aspects of Bayesian probability. Bayesian games are notable because they allowed, for the first time in game theory, for the specification of the soluti ...
- a game in which agents do not know the payoffs of the other agents. The interesting challenge in such a game is to find a
Bayesian Nash equilibrium In game theory, a Bayesian game is a game that models the outcome of player interactions using aspects of Bayesian probability. Bayesian games are notable because they allowed, for the first time in game theory, for the specification of the soluti ...
. However, this is not easy even when there are only two bidders. The situation is simpler when the valuations of the bidders are
i.i.d. random variables In probability theory and statistics, a collection of random variables is independent and identically distributed if each random variable has the same probability distribution as the others and all are mutually independent. This property is us ...
, i.e.: there is a known prior distribution and the valuations of the bidders are all drawn from the same distribution.


Example

Suppose there are two bidders, Alice and Bob, whose valuations a and b are drawn from a
continuous uniform distribution In probability theory and statistics, the continuous uniform distribution or rectangular distribution is a family of symmetric probability distributions. The distribution describes an experiment where there is an arbitrary outcome that lies bet ...
over the interval ,1 Then, it is a Bayesian-Nash equilibrium when each bidder bids exactly half his/her value: Alice bids a/2 and Bob bids b/2. PROOF: The proof takes the point-of-view of Alice. We assume that she knows that Bob bids f(b) = b/2, but she does not know b. We find the best response of Alice to Bob's strategy. Suppose Alice bids x. There are two cases: * x\geq f(b). Then Alice wins and enjoys a net gain of a-x. This happens with probability f^(x)=2x. * x. Then Alice loses and her net gain is 0. This happens with probability 1-f^(x). All in all, Alice's expected gain is: G(x) = f^(x)\cdot(a-x). The maximum gain is attained when G'(x)=0. The derivative is (see
Inverse functions and differentiation In calculus, the inverse function rule is a formula that expresses the derivative of the inverse of a bijective and differentiable function in terms of the derivative of . More precisely, if the inverse of f is denoted as f^, where f^(y) = x i ...
): :G'(x) = - f^(x) + (a-x)\cdot and it is zero when Alice's bid x satisfies: :f^(x) = (a-x)\cdot Now, since we are looking for a symmetric equilibrium, we also want Alice's bid x to equal f(a). So we have: :f^(f(a)) = (a-f(a))\cdot :a = (a-f(a))\cdot :a f'(a) = (a-f(a)) The solution of this differential equation is: f(a) = a/2.


Generalization

Denote by: * v_i - the valuation of bidder i; * y_i - the maximum valuation of all bidders except i, i.e., y_i = \max_. Then, a FPSBA has a unique symmetric BNE in which the bid of player i is given by: ::E y_i < v_i/math>


Incentive-compatible variant

The FPSBA is not
incentive-compatible A mechanism is called incentive-compatible (IC) if every participant can achieve the best outcome to themselves just by acting according to their true preferences. There are several different degrees of incentive-compatibility: * The stronger ...
even in the weak sense of Bayesian-Nash-Incentive-Compatibility (BNIC), since there is no Bayesian-Nash equilibrium in which bidders report their true value. However, it is easy to create a variant of FPSBA which is BNIC, if the priors on the valuations are common knowledge. For example, for the case of Alice and Bob described above, the rules of the BNIC variant are: * The highest bidder wins; * The highest bidder pays 1/2 of his/her bid. In effect, this variant simulates the Bayesian-Nash equilibrium strategies of the players, so in the Bayesian-Nash equilibrium, both bidders bid their true value. This example is a special case of a much more general principle: the
revelation principle The revelation principle is a fundamental principle in mechanism design. It states that if a social choice function can be implemented by an arbitrary mechanism (i.e. if that mechanism has an equilibrium outcome that corresponds to the outcome of ...
.


Comparison to second-price auction

The following table compares FPSBA to sealed-bid
second-price auction A Vickrey auction or sealed-bid second-price auction (SBSPA) is a type of sealed-bid auction. Bidders submit written bids without knowing the bid of the other people in the auction. The highest bidder wins but the price paid is the second-highest ...
(SPSBA): The auctioneer's revenue is calculated in the example case, in which the valuations of the agents are drawn independently and uniformly at random from ,1 As an example, when there are n=2 agents: * In a first-price auction, the auctioneer receives the maximum of the two equilibrium bids, which is \max(a/2,b/2). * In a second-price auction, the auctioneer receives the minimum of the two truthful bids, which is \min(a,b). In both cases, the auctioneer's ''expected'' revenue is 1/3. This fact that the revenue is the same is not a coincidence - it is a special case of the
revenue equivalence Revenue equivalence is a concept in auction theory that states that given certain conditions, any mechanism that results in the same outcomes (i.e. allocates items to the same bidders) also has the same expected revenue. Notation There is a set ...
theorem. This holds only when the agents' valuations are
statistically independent Independence is a fundamental notion in probability theory, as in statistics and the theory of stochastic processes. Two events are independent, statistically independent, or stochastically independent if, informally speaking, the occurrence of o ...
; when the valuations are dependent, we have a
common value auction In common value auctions the value of the item for sale is identical amongst bidders, but bidders have different information about the item's value. This stands in contrast to a private value auction where each bidder's private valuation of the ite ...
, and in this case, the revenue in a second-price auction is usually higher than in a first-price auction. The item for sale may not be sold if the final bid is not high enough to satisfy the seller, that is, the seller reserves the right to accept or reject the highest bid. If the seller announces to the bidders the reserve price, it is a public reserve price auction. In contrast, if the seller does not announce the reserve price before the sale but only after the sale, it is a secret reserve price auction.


Comparison to other auctions

A FPSBA is distinct from the
English auction An English auction is an open-outcry ascending dynamic auction. It proceeds as follows. * The auctioneer opens the auction by announcing a suggested opening bid, a starting price or reserve for the item on sale. * Then the auctioneer accepts incre ...
in that bidders can only submit one bid each. Furthermore, as bidders cannot see the bids of other participants, they cannot adjust their own bids accordingly. FPSBA has been argued to be strategically equivalent to the
Dutch auction A Dutch auction is one of several similar types of auctions for buying or selling goods. Most commonly, it means an auction in which the auctioneer begins with a high asking price in the case of selling, and lowers it until some participant acc ...
. What are effectively FPSBA are commonly called tendering for
procurement Procurement is the method of discovering and agreeing to terms and purchasing goods, services, or other works from an external source, often with the use of a tendering or competitive bidding process. When a government agency buys goods or s ...
by companies and organizations, particularly for government contracts and auctions for mining leases. FPSBA are thought to lead to low procurement costs through competition and low corruption through increased transparency, even though they may entail a higher ex-post extra cost of the completed project and extra time to complete it. A
generalized first-price auction The generalized first-price auction (GFP) is a non-truthful auction mechanism for sponsored search (a.k.a. position auctions). In sponsored search ''n'' bidders compete for the assignment of ''k'' slots. Each slot has an associate click-through ra ...
is a non-truthful auction mechanism for sponsored search (aka position auction). A generalization of both 1st-price and 2nd-price auctions is an auction in which the price is some convex combination of the 1st and 2nd price.


References


Further reading

* {{Cite journal , last1 = Hammami , first1 = Farouk , last2 = Rekik , first2 = Monia , last3 = Coelho , first3 = Leandro C. , year = 2019 , title = Exact and heuristic solution approaches for the bid construction problem in transportation procurement auctions with a heterogeneous fleet , journal = Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review , volume = 127 , pages = 150–177 , doi=10.1016/j.tre.2019.05.009, s2cid = 182223089 Combinatorial auctions for transportation services procurement with first-price sealed-bid rules.


External links


Nash equilibrium in first price auction
- in math.stackexchange.com. Types of auction