Soft-Floor Auctions: Harnessing Regret to Improve Efficiency and Revenue
Dirk Bergemann,
Kevin Breuer,
Peter Cramton,
Jack Hirsch,
Yero Ndiaye and
Axel Ockenfels
Additional contact information
Dirk Bergemann: Yale University
Peter Cramton: Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods and University of Maryland
Jack Hirsch: Harvard University
Yero Ndiaye: University of Cologne and Max Planck Institute for Behavioral Economics
Axel Ockenfels: Adenauer School of Government and Department of Economics, University of Cologne; Max Planck Institute for Behavioral Economics
No 2512, Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers from Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University
Abstract:
A soft-floor auction asks bidders to accept an opening price to participate in a second-price auction. If no bidder accepts, lower bids are considered using first-price rules. Soft floors are common despite being irrelevant with standard assumptions. When bidders regret losing, soft-floor auctions are more efficient and profitable than standard optimal auctions. Revenue increases as bidders are inclined to accept the opening price to compete in a regret-free second-price auction. Efficiency improves because a soft floor allows for a lower hard reserve, reducing the frequency of no sale. Theory and experiment confirm these motivations from practice.
Pages: 65 pages
Date: 2026-04-02
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