Bidding%20Strategies%20at%20Residential%20House%20Auctions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Bidding%20Strategies%20at%20Residential%20House%20Auctions

Description:

Bidding Strategies at Residential House Auctions. Clare Branigan, Paul Ryan. University College Dublin – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:148
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: scix156
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Bidding%20Strategies%20at%20Residential%20House%20Auctions


1
Bidding Strategies at Residential House Auctions
  • Clare Branigan, Paul Ryan
  • University College Dublin

2
Introduction
  • This paper examines bidding strategies at
    auctions for residential property market sales in
    Dublin.
  • The period under examination was September 2004
    to December 2005 which was close to the peak of
    the property boom in Ireland
  • At that time, sales of properties through the
    auction mechanism was more common for premium
    properties

3
Examples
  • In 2005, houses on Shrewsbury Road were among the
    most expensive in Europe after 12 years of almost
    uninterrupted nationwide rises.
  • For example, in 2005, a 4,000 sq ft (372 sq m)
    house on Shrewsbury Road (Dublin 4) set an Irish
    record when a buyer paid more than 58m for a
    home with extensive land to the rear that remains
    undeveloped.
  • Despite having a guide price of 35 million, the
    house eventually reached 58 million due to a
    rumoured six potential buyers vying to purchase
    the property.
  •  In September 2011 the house went on the market
    again for a price of 15 million, down 43
    million from its sale value in 2005, but was
    withdrawn presumably because it never met the
    guide price

4
Example Walford Shrewsbury Road
5

6
Bidding Strategies and Open English Auctions
  • Optimal Bidding strategies for sellers and
    bidders depend on the auctions rules
  • Open English auctions are a popular form of sale
    mechanism in Ireland, particularly at the premium
    end of the market.
  • Open English Auction
  • The auctioneer calls the bid, and the willing
    bidder indicates his assent by some slight
    gesture
  • The auctioneer raises the price incrementally or
    a bidder can offer a higher bid
  • Eventually only one bidder is left who wins the
    auction

7
Bidding Strategies
  • Actual bids can signal that an items true value
    has not been reached (Kagel, 1995) and increased
    bids by others can cause other to copy.
  • Bidders use traffic as an indication of value,
    and more traffic implies higher value.
  • This is consistent to Shillers (1990) theory on
    a shortage illusion.

8
Escalation of Commitment
  • With escalation of commitment, a person allocates
    a resource search costs, finance or intangibles
    (e.g., perception, self-identify) to further a
    goal.
  • When the result is not achieved, they are
    disappointed, and therefore more committed to
    achieving the goal at the next opportunity.

9
Escalation of Commitment
  • A Dublin property auction requires the successful
    bidder to pay a ten per cent deposit for the
    property immediately after the auction, which is
    non-refundable.
  • Thus, a potential bidder is likely to have spent
    funds on a property survey and a title check
    prior to the auction.
  • When the guide price is low, many bidders will
    have sunk costs before the auction, and will be
    committed to winning.

10
Endowment Effect
  • Lower guide prices encourage more bidders to have
    sunk costs in terms of property surveys and legal
    checks
  • This encourages participation in the auction
    which results in the endowment effect
  • All of which results in higher sales prices

11
Sunk Cost Effect
  • The sunk-cost effect is an escalation of
    commitment has been defined as the greater
    tendency to continue an endeavor once an
    investment in money, time or effect has been
    made,(Arkes, Blumer,1985).

12
Sunk Cost Effect
  • Although economic rationality states that sunk
    costs should be ignored and decisions be made on
    the basis of future benefits and costs,
    individuals tend to be retrospectively rational,
    justifying prior decisions (Shaw, 1981).

13
Types of Bidders
  • Neophytes get in early and fade away
  • Sniper the guy who sits in the back row and
    jumps in at the end when all bidding is finished
  • Jump Bidding Jump Bids in high increments to
    discourage competition
  • Flamboyant Bidders Those who attract the
    auctioneers attention by calling bids loudly or
    waving a paddle
  • Shina and Greenleaf (2000)

14
Bidder Aggressiveness
  • Shina and Greenleaf (2000) results indicate that
    bidders at Open English Auctions need to be
    concerned about the aggressiveness of other
    bidders

15
Sniper
  • A sniper is defined to be a late bidder at the
    auction who does not bid until only one
    remaining bidder is left.
  • Popular in online auctions e.g., there is an
    active exchange in eBays chat rooms about how to
    snipe effectively even bidding software that
    will bid for you at the last minute

16
  • A sniper strategy can serve the purpose of
    signalling an aggressive strategy, sending the
    message Dont continue bidding as I am going to
    keep bidding higher.
  • This message discourages competition for two
    related reasons
  • it suggests that the sniper bidder values the
    property more than anyone else, and
  • if the aggressive bidder drops out at any
    stage it implies that you have overbid for the
    item.

17
  • When a sniper influences competitors to drop out
    quickly, he wins the auction at a relatively low
    price does not have to carry out the threat of
    bidding to a high level
  • This reason suggests that auctioneers should
    maintain strict control of the bidding sequence
    in order to promote competition (Avery, 1997)

18
Data Gathered
  • Data for all available auctions in Dublin area
    was collected between Sept 2004 and Nov 2005.

19
Summary 1565 Auctions
20
Methodology
  • Observed over 200 auctions in this time period
  • 105 were sold at auction, by an average of 44
    over the guide price

21
  • Proposition The more bids a person makes, the
    more committed he becomes to winning the auction.

22
Bid Progression






























23
  • For each auction, the number of bids for each
    bidder was counted, and the winning bidder was
    highlighted
  • In 68 of the cases, the person who made the most
    bids was the auction winner, i.e., the bidder
    that is most committed to winning, places the
    most bids.

24
  • This agrees with the theory that actual bids can
    signal that an items true value has not been
    reached (Kagel, 1995) and increased bids by
    others can cause other to copy (herding affect).
  • Bidders use traffic as an indication of value,
    and high traffic implies greater value.
  • Traffic influences the estimated value of an
    item, i.e., traffic often begets more traffic and
    infers value (Shiller, 1990 Simonsohn Ariely,
    2005).

25
Best Bidding Strategy The Sniper
  Winner 1st Bidder Winner 2nd Bidder Other Bidder Winner Sniper
No. of Auctions 18 14 12 22
Winner 27 21 18 39
Over Guide 42 47 57 36
26
Samples

27
27 Belmont Ave, Donnybrook
Apr 05 Guide 700,000
28
27 Belmont Ave, Donnybrook
Apr 05 Guide 700,000 Sold 1.36 m, 4 bidders
94 over guide price
29
8 Temple Cresent, Blackrock
May 05 Guide 650,000
30
8 Temple Cresent, Blackrock
May 05 Guide 650,000 Sold, 1.3 m, 5 bidders 100
over guide
31
Samples Priory Grove, Blackrock
March 05, 730,000
32
Priory Grove, Blackrock

April 06 ?
33
Priory Grove, Blackrock

April 06 ?
Initial 730,000 15
109,000 Upgrades 90,000 Total 929,000
34
Priory Grove, Blackrock

April 06 1.8m
35
References
  • Arkes, H., Blumer, C. (1985). "The Psychology of
    Sunk Costs." Organizational Behaviour and Human
    Decision Process 35 124-140.
  • Avery (1997), Strategic Jump Bidding in English
    Auctions, Review of Economic Studies 65, 185-210
  • Bazerman, M., Sameulson, W. (1983). "I Won the
    Auction but Don't Want the Prize." The Journal of
    Conflict Resolution 27(4) 618-634.
  • Diaz III, G. P., Levy, D. (2002). "Residential
    valuation behaviour in the United States, the
    United Kingdom, and New Zealand." Journal of
    Property Research 19(4) 313-326.
  • Diaz III, H., A. (2001). "Behavioural Research
    into Real Estate Valuation Process Progress
    Toward a Descriptive Model." Research Issues in
    Real Estate 8 3-30.
  • Diaz III, J., Hansz, A. (1997). "How valuers use
    the value opinions of others." Journal of
    Property Valuation Investment 15(3) 256-260.
  • Filiz-Ozbay, E., and Ozbay, Erkut (2007).
    "Auctions with Anticipated Regret." American
    Economic Review 97(4).
  • Galinsky, A., Mussweiler, T. (2001). "First
    offers as anchors The role of perspective-taking
    and negotiator focus." Journal of Personality and
    Social Psychology 81 657-669.
  • Kagel, J. H., Levin, D (1986). "The winner's
    curse and public information in common value
    auctions." American Economic Review 76 894-920.
  • Kagel, J. (1995). Auctions A survey of
    experimental research in J.H. Kagel A. E. Roth
    (Eds.), The handbook of experimental economics
    (pp.501-585). Princeton, NJPrinceton University
    Press

36
References
  • Kahneman, D., Slovic, P., Tversky, A. (1982).
    Judgement under Uncertainty Heuristics and
    Biases. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
  •  
  • Ku, G., Galinsky Adam, Murnigham Keith (2006).
    "Starting Low but Ending High A Reversal of the
    Anchoring Effect in Auctions." Journal of
    Personality and Social Psychology 90(6) 975-986.
  • Mackmin, D. (1994). The Valuation and Sale of
    Residential Property. London, Routledge.
  • McAfee, R., and McMillan, J. (1987). "Auctions
    and Bidding." Journal of Economic Literature
    XXV(June 1987).
  • McGreal, S., Adair, A., McBurney, D. Patterson,
    D. (1998). "Neural networks the prediction of
    residential values." Journal of Property
    Valuation Investment 1196(14) 1.
  • Nofsinger, J. (2005). The Psychology of
    Investing. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey,
    Prentice Hall.
  • Northcraft, G. B., Neale M. A. (1987). "Experts,
    amateurs and real estate An anchoring-and-adjustm
    ent perspective on property pricing decisions."
    Organizational Behaviour and Human Decision
    Process 39.
  • Ozbay, Emel, Ozbay, Erkut (2007). Auctions with
    Anticipated Regret Theory and Experiment. The
    American Economic Review, Vol. 97
  • Schick, F. (1992). "Allowing for Understandings."
    The Journal of Philosophy 89(1) 30-41.
  • Sinha A., Greenleaf, E, (2000)The Impact of
    discrete Bidding and Bidder Aggressiveness on
    Sellers Strategies on Open English Auctions
    reserves and Covert Shilling, Marketing Science,
    Vol 19, No. 3 Summer 2000. 

37
References
  • Arkes, H., Blumer, C. (1985). "The Psychology of
    Sunk Costs." Organizational Behaviour and Human
    Decision Process 35 124-140.
  • Avery (1997), Strategic Jump Bidding in English
    Autions, Review of Economic Studies 65, 185-210
  • Bazerman, M., Sameulson, W. (1983). "I Won the
    Auction but Don't Want the Prize." The Journal of
    Conflict Resolution 27(4) 618-634.
  • Diaz III, G. P., Levy, D. (2002). "Residential
    valuation behaviour in the United States, the
    United Kingdom, and New Zealand." Journal of
    Property Research 19(4) 313-326.
  • Diaz III, H., A. (2001). "Behavioural Research
    into Real Estate Valuation Process Progress
    Toward a Descriptive Model." Research Issues in
    Real Estate 8 3-30.
  • Diaz III, J., Hansz, A. (1997). "How valuers use
    the value opinions of others." Journal of
    Property Valuation Investment 15(3) 256-260.
  • Filiz-Ozbay, E., and Ozbay, Erkut (2007).
    "Auctions with Anticipated Regret." American
    Economic Review 97(4).
  • Galinsky, A., Mussweiler, T. (2001). "First
    offers as anchors The role of perspective-taking
    and negotiator focus." Journal of Personality and
    Social Psychology 81 657-669.
  • Kagel, J. H., Levin, D (1986). "The winner's
    curse and public information in common value
    auctions." American Economic Review 76 894-920.
  • Kagel, J. (1995). Auctions A survey of
    experimental research in J.H. Kagel A. E. Roth
    (Eds.), The handbook of experimental economics
    (pp.501-585). Princeton, NJPrinceton University
    Press
  • Sinha A., Greenleaf, E, (2000)The Impact of
    discrete Bidding and Bidder Aggressiveness on
    Sellers Strategies on Open English Auctions
    reserves and Covert Shilling, Marketing Science,
    Vol 19, No. 3 Summer 2000.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com