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A comparison of different pay-per-bid auction formats

Version 2 2024-03-13, 15:49
Version 1 2024-03-05, 11:01
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 15:49 authored by Ju-Young Kim, Tobias Bruenner, Bernd Skiera, Martin Natter

Pay-per-bid auctions are a popular new type of Internet auction that is unique because a fee is charged for each bid that is placed. This paper uses a theoretical model and three large empirical data sets with 44,614 ascending and 1,460 descending pay-per-bid auctions to compare the economic effects of different pay-per-bid auction formats, such as different price increments and ascending versus descending auctions. The theoretical model suggests revenue equivalence between different price increments and descending and ascending auctions. The empirical results, however, refute the theoretical predictions: ascending auctions with smaller price increments yield, on average, higher revenues per auction than ascending auctions with higher price increments, but their revenues vary much more strongly. On average, ascending auctions yield higher revenues per auction than descending auctions, but results differ strongly across product categories. Additionally, revenues per ascending auction also vary much more strongly.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln Business School (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

International Journal of Research in Marketing

Volume

31

Issue

4

Pages/Article Number

368-379

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0167-8116

Date Submitted

2015-09-11

Date Accepted

2014-12-01

Date of First Publication

2014-06-25

Date of Final Publication

2014-12-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2015-09-07

ePrints ID

18585

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