Search results for "Limit price"

showing 8 items of 8 documents

Upward and Downward Limit Pricing: The Role of Post-Entry Competition

2005

Under asymmetric information, entry-deterring strategies by an incumbent monopolist can consist of deviations from its static monopoly price through downward deviations termed downward limit pricing, or upward deviations termed upward limit pricing. Our analysis shows that the mode of post-entry competition influences the range of situations in which an incumbent adopts a strategy of downward limit pricing instead of an upward one: this range is greater under price than under output competition; it is decreasing in the degree of product differentiation; and with homogeneous product only downward limit pricing emerges under price competition, while upward limit pricing can still take place w…

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsInformation asymmetryMonopoly priceHomogeneousEconomicsProduct (category theory)Product differentiationGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceLimit priceThe B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics
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Modelling Electricity Price Expectations in a Day-Ahead Market: A Case of Latvia

2016

Abstract The paper aims at modelling the electricity generator’s expectations about price development in the Latvian day-ahead electricity market. Correlation and sensitivity analysis methods are used to identify the key determinants of electricity price expectations. A neural network approach is employed to model electricity price expectations. The research results demonstrate that electricity price expectations depend on the historical electricity prices. The price a day ago is the key determinant of price expectations and the importance of the lagged prices reduces as the time backwards lengthens. Nine models of electricity price expectations are prepared for different natural seasons an…

HF5001-6182neural networkproduction decision makingbusiness.industry020209 energyMid priceadaptive expectations02 engineering and technologypriceProfit (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomics as a science0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringMarket priceEconomicsElectricity marketBusinessPrice levelelectricityAdaptive expectationsElectricitybusinessprofitHB71-74Limit priceEconomics and Business
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Price-Time Priority and Pro Rata Matching in an Order Book Model of Financial Markets

2011

Using our recently introduced order book model of financial markets we analyzed two different matching principles for order allocation — price-time priority and pro rata matching. Price-time priority uses the submission timestamp which prioritizes orders in the book with the same price. The order which was entered earliest at a given price limit gets executed first. Pro rata matching is used for products with low intraday volatility of best bid and best ask price. Pro rata matching ensures constant access for orders of all sizes. We demonstrate how a multiagent-based model of financial market can be used to study microscopic aspects of order books.

MicroeconomicsActuarial sciencePro rataOrder (exchange)Ask priceMatching principleFinancial marketEconomicsOrder bookVolatility (finance)Limit price
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Entry under uncertainty: Limit and most-favored-customer pricing

2015

Abstract In the absence of uncertainty, an incumbent that attempts to prevent entry of rival firms can have no incentive to offer a most-favored-customer (MFC) clause because it could lead to higher post-entry prices. Our analysis suggests that this is not necessarily the case under uncertainty. In the presence of uncertainty, the incumbent can set a limit price that affects the entry decision. Limit pricing involves a pre-entry price different from the static monopoly price, which leads to a signaling cost. We show that part of this cost can be distributed over several periods by means of consumer refunds from the MFC clause. If the discount factor is not very high, the incumbent adopts th…

MicroeconomicsDiscountingIncentiveSociology and Political ScienceMonopoly priceEconomicsGeneral Social SciencesLimit (mathematics)Statistics Probability and UncertaintySet (psychology)General PsychologyIndustrial organizationLimit priceMathematical Social Sciences
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Pricing Policies of Excess Capacity in Make to Order Production Systems

2014

The research concerns a make to order manufacturing environment and two classes of customers who submit orders. The core customers have a contract with the firm at fixed services level (price and due date). The short-term customers submit the orders based on the price set by the firm. In this paper, it is proposed a pricing policy based on fuzzy logic to set the price for the short-term customers. The fuzzy approach captures the state of the manufacturing systems in terms of congestion in order to set the price. The policy proposed is compared to a fixed price, and to a state-dependent policy based on three levels of price. A discrete event simulation environment is used to test the propose…

Operations researchOrder (exchange)Build to orderFixed priceProduction (economics)Capacity utilizationBusinessDiscrete event simulationMarketingSettore ING-IND/35 - Ingegneria Economico-GestionaleFuzzy logicexcess of capacity make to order fuzzy logic discrete event simulationLimit price
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Entry with two correlated signals : the case of industrial espionage and its positive competitive effects

2021

Recent advances in information and communication technologies have increased the incentives for firms to acquire information about rivals. These advances may have major implications for market entry because they make it easier for potential entrants to gather valuable information about, for example, an incumbent’s cost structure. However, little theoretical research has actually analyzed this question. This paper advances the literature by extending a one-sided asymmetric information version of Milgrom and Roberts’ (1982) limit pricing model. Here, the entrant is allowed access to an intelligence system (IS) of a certain precision that generates a noisy signal on the incumbent’s cost struct…

Statistics and ProbabilityEconomics and EconometricsPoolingMicroeconomicsCompetition (economics)C72Mathematics (miscellaneous)Information asymmetryasymmetric informationEconomicsSet (psychology)EspionatgeL12L10Competència econòmicaentry deterrencepooling equilibriaD82IncentiveIndustrial espionageInformation and Communications TechnologySocietat de la informaciólimit pricingStatistics Probability and UncertaintySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Limit price
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What really causes large price changes?

2003

We study the cause of large fluctuations in prices in the London Stock Exchange. This is done at the microscopic level of individual events, where an event is the placement or cancellation of an order to buy or sell. We show that price fluctuations caused by individual market orders are essentially independent of the volume of orders. Instead, large price fluctuations are driven by liquidity fluctuations, variations in the market's ability to absorb new orders. Even for the most liquid stocks there can be substantial gaps in the order book, corresponding to a block of adjacent price levels containing no quotes. When such a gap exists next to the best price, a new order can remove the best q…

Volume-weighted average priceQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureFinancial economicsMid priceFOS: Physical sciencesTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Market liquidityFOS: Economics and businessCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterExecution Commerce optimal liquidationMarket depthOrder (exchange)EconomicsOrder bookEconometricsPrice levelGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceLimit priceOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)Quantitative Finance
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Economic feasibility of a customer-side energy storage in the Italian electricity market

2015

Electricity prices show significant short-term variations during the day due to the need of balancing supply and demand in real time. Normally, customers are not exposed to these variations but pay a constant electricity price. In an attempt to reduce the volatility of the wholesale prices, several utilities are moving from conventional fixed-rate pricing schemes to new market-based models, where the electricity price can fluctuate during the day depending on the market conditions. Examples of time-dependent pricing schemes are Time-Of-Use (TOU) tariffs, where the electricity price can take two or three price levels during the day, or Real-Time Pricing (RTP) tariffs, where the energy price …

business.industryEnergy storageSupply and demandload shiftingSettore ING-IND/33 - Sistemi Elettrici Per L'Energiaeconomic feasibilityhourly electricity priceelectricity marketElectricity marketEnergy marketPrice levelElectricitybattery energy storage systembusinessElectricity retailingIndustrial organizationLimit price2015 IEEE 15th International Conference on Environment and Electrical Engineering (EEEIC)
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