Auctions without commitment in the auto-bidding world
Aranyak Mehta, Andres Perlroth

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how the lack of commitment by auctioneers influences advertisers' choice of auto-bidding strategies, showing that non-commitment makes target CPA bidding more profitable for bidders and beneficial for auctioneers.
Contribution
It introduces a game-theoretic model demonstrating that bidders prefer tCPA in non-committed auctions and that auctioneers can benefit from credible commitment, which was previously unexplored.
Findings
Bidders prefer tCPA when auctioneers lack commitment.
Credible equilibrium exists for tCPA but not for mCPA.
Auctioneer revenue can be higher with tCPA under certain conditions.
Abstract
Advertisers in online ad auctions are increasingly using auto-bidding mechanisms to bid into auctions instead of directly bidding their value manually. One prominent auto-bidding format is the target cost-per-acquisition (tCPA) which maximizes the volume of conversions subject to a return-of-investment constraint. From an auction theoretic perspective however, this trend seems to go against foundational results that postulate that for profit-maximizing bidders, it is optimal to use a classic bidding system like marginal CPA (mCPA) bidding rather than using strategies like tCPA. In this paper we rationalize the adoption of such seemingly sub-optimal bidding within the canonical quasi-linear framework. The crux of the argument lies in the notion of commitment. We consider a multi-stage game where first the auctioneer declares the auction rules; then bidders select either the tCPA or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing · Merger and Competition Analysis
