First (or second) price auctions with optimally chosen reserve prices
maximize revenue among all possible selling procedures when buyers are
risk-neutral, ex-ante identical, and the seller commits to throw away
the object for sale if no one bids above the reserve price. However,
sellers seldom remove unsold items from the market: Real estate, used
cars and art reappear in later auctions. This paper derives the
profit-maximizing selling procedure when the seller, after each
unsuccessful attempt to sell the item, updates her information about the
buyers’ willingness to pay and proposes an optimal selling
procedure given the updated information. We show that first- (or
second-) price auctions with optimally chosen reserve prices are
revenue-maximizing when buyers are ex-ante identical. When buyers’
valuations are drawn from different distributions, the seller maximizes
revenue by assigning the good to the buyer with the highest virtual
valuation if it is above a buyer-specific reserve price. Reserve prices
drop over time. How much the optimal reserve prices drop depends on how
the seller discounts the future. Inability to commit is costly for the
seller. The revenue loss is highest for intermediate values of the
discount factor and when the number of buyers is small