Japanese auction
A Japanese auction is a dynamic auction format. It proceeds in the following way.
- An initial price is displayed. This is usually a low price - it may be either 0 or the seller's reserve price.
- All buyers that are interested in buying the item at the displayed price enter the auction arena.
- The displayed price increases continuously, or by small discrete steps.
- Each buyer may exit the arena at any moment.
- No exiting buyer is allowed to re-enter the arena.
- When a single buyer remains in the arena, the auction stops. The remaining buyer wins the item and pays the displayed price.
Strategies
When all buyers play their dominant strategies, the outcome is:
- The winning buyer is the buyer with the highest valuation;
- The final price is the second-highest valuation.
Comparison to Vickrey auction
- Simplicity: the bidders do not have to report their values in advance; all they have to do is make a binary decision in each point of time, whether to remain or to leave the arena.
- Obvious truthfulness: acting according to the true valuation is a dominant strategy even if there are other bidders whose actions depend on your own action. In particular, being truthful is a dominant strategy even if the auctioneer secretly sends allies that bid according to your own bid.
- Information revelation: buyers can see the exit-prices of the other buyers, and dynamically update their own valuation accordingly. This point is relevant when the buyers' valuations are affiliated. In this case, buyers in a Vickrey auction might be hurt by the winner's curse: if all buyers bid truthfully, the winner pays more than the actual value, since all other bids are lower. This, in turn, makes them to decrease their bids below their true value, and decreases the seller's revenue. In contrast, in a Japanese auction, buyers may gain information during the auction, so they are willing to make higher bids and this increases the seller's revenue.
Comparison to English auction