Working Paper

Strategic Leaks in First-Price Auctions and Tacit Collusion: The Case of Spying and Counter-Spying

Cuihong Fan, Byoung Heon Jun, Elmar G. Wolfstetter
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9021

We analyze strategic leaks due to spying out a rival’s bid in a first-price auction. Such leaks induce sequential bidding, complicated by the fact that the spy may be a counterspy who serves the interests of the spied at bidder and reports strategically distorted information. This ambiguity about the type of spy gives rise to a non-standard signaling problem where both sender and receiver of messages have private information and the sender has a chance to make an unobserved move. Whereas spying without counterspy exclusively benefits the spying bidder, the potential presence of a counterspy yields a collusive outcome, even if the likelihood that the spy is a counterspy is arbitrarily small. That collusive impact shows up in all equilibria and is strongest in the unique pooling equilibrium which is also the payoff dominant equilibrium.

CESifo Category
Industrial Organisation
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Keywords: auctions, tacit collusion, espionage, second-mover advantage, signaling, incomplete information
JEL Classification: L120, L130, L410, D430, D440, D820