Essentially there are three different types of auctions:
Auctionomics’ proprietary software offers unprecedented advantages to companies and governments seeking the best buyers for their goods, services, or portfolio. Our software finds exact market-clearing prices and then selects the allocation of lots among bidders that maximizes the auctioneer’s profit. The auctioneer is guaranteed a) that prices are set by competition among buyers, b) that the auctioneer will never sell below its minimum offers, and c) that the auctioneer will receive the mix of product sales that will maximize profit at market-clearing prices, whether this allocation involves multiple buyers or a single one. These guarantees hold even in cases of opaque prices, swaps, and auctions for multiple substitute-goods with delivery constraints. Auctionomics allows each bidder to specify a complete supply-function, including quantity-constraints on each bid and bid-group, as well as specifying swaps and selecting among substitute goods. Even if your buyers are located in every geographical region and time zone, we provide the solution: the clock auction finds market-clearing prices and quantities fast, and the assignment auction does so immediately, at the click of a button.
Auctionomics offers the same unprecedented advantages not only to companies and governments wishing to sell, but also to those seeking to purchase goods, services, or a portfolio from the best vendors. The buyer is then the auctioneer: after finding exact market-clearing prices, our proprietary software selects the mix of purchases that maximizes the buyer’s value. The buyer is guaranteed a) never to buy above its maximum offers, and b) always to receive the mix of product sales that will maximize its profit at market-clearing prices, whether this allocation involves multiple vendors or a single one. These guarantees still hold even in cases of opaque prices, swaps, and auctions for multiple substitute-goods with delivery constraints. Auctionomics’ designs allow each bidder to specify a complete supply-function, including quantity-constraints on each bid and bid-group, as well as to specify swaps, select among substitute goods, and include shrinkage on each single product. Our reverse auctions also use clock- and assignment-auction technologies in order to find equilibrium values rapidly or immediately, facilitating the participation of bidders from every time zone and geographical region.
Auctionomics’ innovations in economic theory result in designs that offer unmatched value and performance to institutions running an exchange or seeking to build a new one. After finding exact market-clearing prices, our software selects the allocation with the highest total value differential, maximizing gain for all buyers and sellers. Auctionomics’ exchanges increase value not only for buyers and sellers, but also for the auctioneer: our designs increase the liquidity of markets by guaranteeing that every bidder receives its preferred allocation at market-clearing prices; when prices are opaque, they implement an incentive-compatible price-discovery mechanism; and our exchanges maximize the added-value-based transaction-fees received by the auctioneer by maximizing total value added for all bidders. And, like our auctions to buy or sell, Auctionomics’ exchanges can handle complex situations with multiple substitute-goods, and use clock- or assignment-auction technology in order to find equilibrium values rapidly or immediately, again obviating time-zone constraints, and facilitating the participation of bidders from all over the globe.
The different types of auctions can be implemented using different mechanisms, including:
Clock Auction
The clock auction is provided by one of our partners and represents the current state of the art in multi-product auctions. It can be run either as a “forward” auction, the familiar scenario in which a seller is the auctioneer and prospective buyers make competing bids, or as a “reverse” auction, in which the auctioneer is a buyer who takes bids from prospective vendors. Before the auction begins, the auctioneer announces lot-sizes, price-increments, and numbers of lots available (forward) or required (reverse) for each product.
In the forward auction, prices rise according to Auctionomics’ proprietary “perfect increment” technology: in each round, buyers indicate how many lots of each product they want to buy at the new, higher prices quoted that round. Buyers can change the distribution of their bids among the various products at each round, although an “activity rule,” designed to stimulate participation throughout the auction, prohibits a buyer from increasing the value of its total quantity demanded, as prices rise. The auction ends, and final prices are established, when the market clears for every product: when, for each product, the total number of lots bid upon equals the total number available. The reverse clock auction follow the mirror image of this process, where the buyer-auctioneer’s prices continue to fall until the number of lots offered at that price is equal to the number the buyer needs. Whether buying or selling, the clock auction allows the auctioneer to trade with whatever combination of bidders values the exchange the most.
Milgrom Assignment Auction
The Milgrom Assignment Auction represents the next generation of multi-product auctions. It can accept bids to buy, sell, swap, or any combination of these; it can deal with anywhere from just a few bidders and items to thousands of both; and, once initiated, it is instantaneous.
Auctionomics’ software is based on Milgrom’s innovations in game theory, and built around a proprietary “messaging technology” that enables bidders, using just a few keystrokes, to express not only supply- or demand-curves for each product, but also substitution possibilities among different products. This ability to give a sophisticated picture of its preferences eliminates the clock-auction bidder’s need to sit around waiting to express its demand at various prices.
Our innovative message space is the key to our software’s unique combination of power and flexibility, allowing it to retain the information-revealing advantages of the clock auction, while bringing the extreme speed and ease of use of the sealed-bid format to a host of new applications.
As a sealed-bid auction, the Milgrom Assignment Auction runs itself, calculating the value-maximizing allocation and market clearing prices without the need for multiple rounds. This immediacy and efficiency is especially important when speed is paramount, for example when time to run the auction is short, or when bidders are dispersed in multiple time zones around the world.
The Milgrom Assignment Auction also has enhancements that are not available in clock auctions. One allows bidders to express budget constraints that are respected in the bidding for multiple items. Another allows buyers or sellers to name minimum quantities. A third allows bidders to explicitly account for fixed costs. None of these enhancements can be added to a standard
clock auction.
The immediacy of any sealed-bid auction incurs a cost: a single round precludes the gradual emergence, over the course of the auction, of useful information about the depth of demand or supply. But no sealed-bid format has ever before allowed bidders the flexibility offered by the Milgrom Assignment Auction.
The basic Milgrom Assignment Auction guarantees these powerful results:
- Quantities are always optimal for all bidders: every bidder gets exactly what it wants, given the quoted prices.
- Markets clear exactly: supply is set equal to demand for every product.
Unless its specified constraints prevent it, every bidder is assigned the combination of items that give it the highest margin, and every bidder thus trades every item that offers it a positive margin according to its bid: each bidder sells all its goods that offer it a positive “seller’s margin” (the difference between the market-clearing price and the bidder’s minimum selling-price), and each also purchases all goods that offer it a positive “buyer’s margin” (the difference between market-clearing price and the bidder’s maximum buying-price).
The Milgrom Assignment Auction can also be run as a two-stage auction: while avoiding the ad hoc adjustments common in clock auctions, and maintaining the incremental accuracy necessary to avoid overshooting equilibrium, the two-stage version offers the information-feedback advantages of the clock auction while running much faster.