A Regret Analysis of Bilateral Trade
Nicol\`o Cesa-Bianchi, Tommaso Cesari (TSE), Roberto Colomboni (IIT),, Federico Fusco, Stefano Leonardi

TL;DR
This paper studies bilateral trade without prior knowledge of valuations, analyzing regret bounds for fixed-price mechanisms under various feedback models and valuation assumptions.
Contribution
It provides the first regret analysis framework for bilateral trade, characterizing regret regimes for fixed-price mechanisms with different feedback and valuation models.
Findings
Regret is $ ilde{O}( oot{2}{T})$ with full feedback.
Regret is $ ilde{O}(T^{2/3})$ with realistic feedback and independent valuations.
Regret is linear in T for certain feedback and valuation settings.
Abstract
Bilateral trade, a fundamental topic in economics, models the problem of intermediating between two strategic agents, a seller and a buyer, willing to trade a good for which they hold private valuations. Despite the simplicity of this problem, a classical result by Myerson and Satterthwaite (1983) affirms the impossibility of designing a mechanism which is simultaneously efficient, incentive compatible, individually rational, and budget balanced. This impossibility result fostered an intense investigation of meaningful trade-offs between these desired properties. Much work has focused on approximately efficient fixed-price mechanisms, i.e., Blumrosen and Dobzinski (2014; 2016), Colini-Baldeschi et al. (2016), which have been shown to fully characterize strong budget balanced and ex-post individually rational direct revelation mechanisms. All these results, however, either assume some…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal trade and economics
