The Limits of an Information Intermediary in Auction Design
Reza Alijani, Siddhartha Banerjee, Kamesh Munagala, Kangning Wang

TL;DR
This paper investigates the limitations of an information intermediary in multi-buyer auctions, demonstrating fundamental impossibilities in achieving optimal consumer surplus and proposing approximation schemes for certain settings.
Contribution
It extends single-buyer signaling results to multi-buyer auctions, establishing impossibility bounds and providing polynomial-time approximation schemes.
Findings
No signaling scheme can guarantee efficiency and high consumer surplus simultaneously for multiple buyers.
A constant-factor approximation scheme is developed for i.i.d. regular buyers.
Impossibility results highlight a sharp difference between single and multi-buyer auction settings.
Abstract
We study the limits of an information intermediary in the classical Bayesian auction, where a revenue-maximizing seller sells one item to buyers with independent private values. In addition, we have an intermediary who knows the buyers' private values, and can map these to a public signal so as to increase consumer surplus. This model generalizes the single-buyer setting proposed by Bergemann, Brooks, and Morris, who present a signaling scheme that raises the optimal consumer surplus, by guaranteeing that the item is always sold and the seller gets the same revenue as without signaling. Our work aims to understand how this result ports to the setting with multiple buyers. We likewise define the benchmark for the optimal consumer surplus: one where the auction is efficient (i.e., the item is always sold to the highest-valued buyer) and the revenue of the seller is unchanged. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies · Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing
