Auctions
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Auctions
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
Months of procrastination and righteous protestations to the
contrary led to the inevitable: the European Commission assented on
September 2002 to a joint venture between Germany's T-mobile and
Britain's mmO2 to share the mammoth costs of erecting third
generation - 3G in the parlance - mobile phone networks in both
countries. The two companies were among the accursed winners of a
series of spectrum auctions in the late 1990's. Altogether telecom
firms shelled well over $100 billion to secure 3G licences in
markets as diverse as Germany, Italy, the UK, and the Netherlands.
There is little doubt that governments - and, through them, the
public - have made a killing in these auctions. But paying the fees
left the winners' coffers depleted. They are now unable to comply
with the licence terms and provide the service that is supposed to
revolutionize wireless communications and data retrieval.
Judged narrowly, from the sellers' point of view, these auctions
have been an astounding success. But the outcomes of the best
auctions encompass the widest possible utility - including the
buyers' and the public's. From this wider angle, go the critics,
spectrum auctions have been an abysmal failure.
This is surprising. Auctions are nothing new. The notorious slave
fairs of the 18th and 19th century were auction markets. Similar
bazaars existed in ancient Greece. Many commodities, such as US
loose leaf tobacco, are exclusively sold in such tenders as are
government bonds, second hand goods, used machinery, artworks,
antiques, stamps, old coins, rare books, jewelry, and property
foreclosed by financial institutions or expropriated by the
government. Several stock and commodity exchanges the world over are
auction-based. A branch of game theory - auction theory - deals with
the intricacies of auctions and how they can be frustrated by
collusion implicit or explicit.
All auctions are managed by an auctioneer who rewards the desired
article to the highest bidder and charges the seller - and sometimes
the bidder a fee, a percentage of the realized price. In almost all
auctions, the seller sets a - published or undisclosed - "reserve"
price - the lowest bid it is willing to accept and below which the
item is "reserved", i.e., goes unsold.
In an English "open outcry" auction, bids are made public, allowing
other bidders to up the ante. In a first-price - or discriminatory -
sealed bid auction, bids remain secret until the auctioneer opens
the sealed envelopes at a pre-determined time. In the Vickrey - or
uniform second price - auction the winner pays an amount equal to
the second highest bid. In a Dutch auction, the auctioneer announces
a series of decreasing prices and awards the article to the first
bidder. These epithets are used in financial markets to designate
other types of auctions.
Auctions are no longer considered the most efficient method in
markets with imperfect competition - as most markets are.
Steve Kaplan and Mohanbir Sawhney noted in an article published by
the Harvard Business Review two years ago that the advent of the
Internet removed two handicaps. It allows an unlimited number of
potential bidders and sellers to congregate virtually on Web sites
such as eBay. It also eliminated the substantial costs of
traditional, physical, auctions. The process of matching buyers with
sellers - i.e., finding equilibrium prices which clear supply and
demand efficiently - was also simplified in e-hubs.
Yet, as Paul Milgrom of Stanford University pointed out to "The
Economist":
"Arguments that online exchanges will produce big increases in
efficiency ... implicitly assume that the Internet will make markets
perfectly competitive - with homogeneous products and competition on
price alone ... (ignore the fact that) markets for most goods and
services in fact have 'imperfect competition' - similar but slightly
differentiated products competing on many things besides price."
Moreover, as Paul Klemperer of Oxford University observes, bidders
sometimes collude - explicitly, in "rings", or implicitly, by
signaling each other - to rig the process or deter "outsider"
entrants. New participants often underbid, expecting incumbents to
overbid.
An FCC auction of wireless data transmission frequencies in April
1997 raised only $14 million - rather than the $1.8 billion
expected. This was apparently achieved by signals to warn off
competitors embedded in the bids themselves. Salomon Brothers
admitted, in August 1991, to manipulating US treasury auctions - by
submitting fake bids - and paid a fine of $290 million.
Another problem is the "winner's curse" - the tendency to bid too
high to ensure winning. Wary of this propensity, bidders often bid
too low - especially in sealed bid auctions or in auctions with many
bidders, says Jeremy Bulow of Stanford University in a paper he co-
authored with Klemperer. And, as opposed to fixed prices, preparing
for an auction consumes resources while the risk of losing is high.
So, are the critics right? Have the 3G auctions - due to their
inherent imperfections or erroneous design - brought the winners to
their pecuniary knees? will the sunk costs of the licence fees be
passed on to reluctant consumers? Should the European Commission and
governments in Europe allow winners to co-invest, co-own, co-
operate, and co-maintain their networks?
This, at best, is debatable.
Frequencies are a commodity in perfect competition - though their
price (their "common value") is unknown. Theoretically, auctioning
the spectrum is the most efficient way to make bidders pay for
their "monopoly rent" - i.e., their excess profits. Bidders know
best where their interests lie and how much they can pay and the
auction process extracts this information from them in the form of a
bid. They may misread the market and go bust - but this is a risk
every business takes.
Economic theory decouples the size of the bids from the marginal
return on investment. But, in the real world, the higher
the "commitment fees" in the shape of costs sunk into obtaining the
licenes - the more motivated the winners are to recoup them by
investing in infrastructure, providing innovative services
competitively, and aggressively marketing their offerings. The
licences are fully tradable assets whose value depends on added
investment in networks and customers.
Too late, telcoms are realizing the magnitude of their mistake.
Consumers are ill-prepared for the wireless Internet. Clashing
standards, incompatible devices, reluctant hardware manufacturers,
the spread of broadband, the recession - all conspire to undermine
the sanguine business plans of yesteryear. Yet, getting it wrong
does not justify a bail-out. On the very contrary, the losers should
be purged by that famous invisible hand. Inexorable and merciless as
it may be, the market - unencumbered by state intervention - always
ends up delivering commercial, non-public, goods cheaply and
efficiently.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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