English

Dynamic Reserve Prices for Repeated Auctions: Learning from Bids

Computer Science and Game Theory 2020-02-19 v1 Theoretical Economics

Abstract

A large fraction of online advertisement is sold via repeated second price auctions. In these auctions, the reserve price is the main tool for the auctioneer to boost revenues. In this work, we investigate the following question: Can changing the reserve prices based on the previous bids improve the revenue of the auction, taking into account the long-term incentives and strategic behavior of the bidders? We show that if the distribution of the valuations is known and satisfies the standard regularity assumptions, then the optimal mechanism has a constant reserve. However, when there is uncertainty in the distribution of the valuations, previous bids can be used to learn the distribution of the valuations and to update the reserve price. We present a simple, approximately incentive-compatible, and asymptotically optimal dynamic reserve mechanism that can significantly improve the revenue over the best static reserve. The paper is from July 2014 (our submission to WINE 2014), posted later here on the arxiv to complement the 1-page abstract in the WINE 2014 proceedings.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2002.07331,
  title  = {Dynamic Reserve Prices for Repeated Auctions: Learning from Bids},
  author = {Yash Kanoria and Hamid Nazerzadeh},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2002.07331},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

1-page abstract appeared in the proceedings of Web and Internet Economics ( WINE ), 2014

R2 v1 2026-06-23T13:44:47.632Z