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πŸ† The Winner's Curse

When Winning Means Losing

The Paradox

In a competitive auction with uncertain value, the winner is the bidder who overestimated the most. Even if everyone bids rationally, the winner tends to pay more than the item is worth. The very act of winning is evidence that you overbid. More bidders = worse curse. First discovered in 1970s oil lease auctions, now seen in sports, M&A, and eBay.

🎯 Run an Auction

🏺

Mystery Antique

Number of Bidders: 5

πŸ“Š Curse Severity

Run an auction to see results

Profitable Severe Overpay

πŸ§ͺ Monte Carlo: 1000 Auctions

Bidders per Auction: 5

πŸ“ˆ Bidders vs. Curse Severity

More bidders = more extreme estimates = worse curse

πŸ’° Real-World Case Studies

πŸ›’οΈ Oil Lease Auctions (1970s)

Where it was discovered! Capen, Clapp & Campbell analyzed oil drilling rights. Companies winning competitive bids consistently drilled unprofitable wells. Average return: -17%

⚾ Baseball Free Agency

Teams signing free agents in competitive bidding pay ~30% more than market value. Players rarely live up to record contracts. The curse punishes the most eager bidder.

🏒 Corporate M&A

60-80% of acquisitions destroy shareholder value. Acquirers on average pay 40% premium. The "winner" often overpaid for synergies that never materialize.

πŸ“» 3G Spectrum Auctions (2000)

European telecom companies bid €100+ billion. Many went bankrupt. UK auction raised 5Γ— expectationsβ€”great for government, devastating for winners.

E[Value | Winning] < E[Value]

The expected value GIVEN that you won is less than the unconditional expected value. Winning is bad news about what you're buying.

🎯 The Solution

Shade your bid down! Rational bidders should subtract an amount from their estimate that increases with the number of competitors. If there are n bidders, bid as if your estimate is the highest of n estimatesβ€”because if you win, it probably is. The curse only affects those who don't account for it.