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8 - A Practical Guide to the Combinatorial Clock Auction

from Part II - The Combinatorial Clock Auction Designs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2017

Lawrence M. Ausubel
Affiliation:
Department of Economics, University of Maryland
Oleg Baranov
Affiliation:
Department of Economics, University of Colorado Boulder
Martin Bichler
Affiliation:
Technische Universität München
Jacob K. Goeree
Affiliation:
University of New South Wales, Sydney
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Summary

Since its proposal in a 2006 academic paper, the combinatorial clock auction (CCA) has rapidly established itself as one of the leading formats for government auctions of telecommunications spectrum. Its initial implementations were for relatively small auctions and some of these applications may be viewed as experimental. However, in the past few years, usage of the CCA has gained substantial momentum. From 2012 to this writing in 2015, the CCA has been used for more than ten major spectrum auctions worldwide, allocating prime sub-1-GHz spectrum on three continents and raising approximately $20 billion in revenues (see Table 1). Despite the presence of an existing auction format—the simultaneous multiple round auction (SMRA)—which often performs reasonably well, the CCA has the potential of displacing it and becoming the new standard design choice for spectrum auctions.

The CCA design consists of a two-stage bidding process. The first stage, known as the clock rounds, is a multiple-round clock auction. In each round, the auctioneer announces prices for all items and bidders respond with quantities demanded at these prices. If aggregate demand exceeds available supply for any items, the auctioneer announces higher prices for these items in the next round. The bidding process continues until prices reach a level at which aggregate demand is less than or equal to supply for every item. The second stage, known as the supplementary round, is a sealed-bid auction process in which bidders can improve their bids made in the first stage and submit additional bids as desired for other combinations of items. Throughout the entire auction, all bids are treated as all-or-nothing package bids.

To determine winnings and associated payments, all bids placed during the clock rounds and all bids placed in the supplementary round are entered together into a standard winner determination problem (WDP). Winning packages are determined by finding an allocation that maximizes the total value (as reflected in bids) subject to feasibility constraints: each item can be sold only once and only one bid from each bidder can be selected as part of the winning allocation.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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References

Ausubel, Lawrence M., and Oleg V., Baranov. 2014. “Market Design and the Evolution of the Combinatorial Clock Auction.” American Economic Review: Papers & Proceedings, 104(5): 446-451.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ausubel, Lawrence M., and Oleg V., Baranov. 2016a. “Revealed Preference and Activity Rules in Auctions.” Working paper.
Ausubel, Lawrence M., and Oleg V., Baranov. 2016b. “Vickrey-Based Pricing in Iterative First-Price Auctions.” Working paper.
Ausubel, Lawrence M., Peter, Cramton and Paul, Milgrom. 2006. “The Clock-Proxy Auction:APractical Combinatorial Auction Design.” In Combinatorial Auctions, eds. Peter, Cramton,Yoav, Shoham, and Richard, Steinberg, 115–138. Cambridge: MIT Press.
Ausubel, Lawrence M., and Paul, Milgrom. 2002. “Ascending Auctions with Package Bidding.” Frontiers of Theoretical Economics 1(1): Article 1.Google Scholar
Bichler, Martin, Jacob, Goeree, Stefan, Mayer and Pasha, Shabalin. 2014 “Spectrum auction design: Simple auctions for complex sales.” Telecommunications Policy 38(7), 613–622.Google Scholar
Bichler, Martin, Pasha, Shabalin and Jürgen, Wolf. 2013. “Do core-selecting combinatorial clock auctions always lead to high efficiency? An experimental analysis of spectrum auction designs.” Experimental Economics 16(4): 511–545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cramton, Peter. 2013. “Spectrum Auction Design.” Review of Industrial Organization 42(2): 161–190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Day, Robert W., and Peter, Cramton. 2012. “Quadratic Core-Selecting Payment Rules for Combinatorial Auctions.” Operations Research 60(3): 588–603.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Day, Robert W., and S., Raghavan. 2007. “Fair Payments for Efficient Allocations in Public Sector Combinatorial Auctions.” Management Science 53: 1389–1406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Levin, Jonathan and Andrzej, Skrzypacz. 2014. “Are Dynamic Vickrey Auctions Practical?: Properties of the Combinatorial Clock Auction.” Working paper.
Nisan, Noam. 2006. “Bidding Languages for Combinatorial Auctions.” In Combinatorial Auctions, eds. Peter, Cramton, Yoav, Shoham, and Richard, Steinberg, 215–231. Cambridge: MIT Press.
Parkes, David C. 2001. “Iterative Combinatorial Auctions: Achieving Economic and Computational Efficiency.” Univ. of Pennsylvania doctoral dissertation.

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