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Reserve Price Optimization for First Price Auctions

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  • Zhe Feng
  • S'ebastien Lahaie
  • Jon Schneider
  • Jinchao Ye

Abstract

The display advertising industry has recently transitioned from second- to first-price auctions as its primary mechanism for ad allocation and pricing. In light of this, publishers need to re-evaluate and optimize their auction parameters, notably reserve prices. In this paper, we propose a gradient-based algorithm to adaptively update and optimize reserve prices based on estimates of bidders' responsiveness to experimental shocks in reserves. Our key innovation is to draw on the inherent structure of the revenue objective in order to reduce the variance of gradient estimates and improve convergence rates in both theory and practice. We show that revenue in a first-price auction can be usefully decomposed into a \emph{demand} component and a \emph{bidding} component, and introduce techniques to reduce the variance of each component. We characterize the bias-variance trade-offs of these techniques and validate the performance of our proposed algorithm through experiments on synthetic data and real display ad auctions data from Google ad exchange.

Suggested Citation

  • Zhe Feng & S'ebastien Lahaie & Jon Schneider & Jinchao Ye, 2020. "Reserve Price Optimization for First Price Auctions," Papers 2006.06519, arXiv.org, revised Jun 2020.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2006.06519
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Riley, John G & Samuelson, William F, 1981. "Optimal Auctions," American Economic Review, American Economic Association, vol. 71(3), pages 381-392, June.
    2. Roger B. Myerson, 1981. "Optimal Auction Design," Mathematics of Operations Research, INFORMS, vol. 6(1), pages 58-73, February.
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