Greg, in general the press is lazy. They will take the press release over doing their own analysis every time.
IO, a lower than reserve price may actually be accepted. A reserve price is based on what an auction 'should' bring. Sometimes the auctioneer over compensates or conditions on the ground deteriorate. Auctions generally reflect valid pricing. So if the FCC sees that a particular EA only garnered X they may actually accept the bid.
There are two primary factors involved here: the first is that the dominant strategy is to converge on reserve price slowly so that the winning bid exceeds reserve price by as little as possible; the second is that the FCC has a history of reducing reserve price if it looks like the bidding on a license isn't going to reach the initial reserve price.
Where is the “history of reducing reserve price if it looks like the bidding on a license isn't going to reach the initial reserve price.” That is likely to get the FCC sued, especially in this case (although I am not a lawyer.) Check out my piece in CNET dicsussing that.(http://www.news.com/Quit-fo...)
Greg, it has happened repeatedly when a license has gone 20-30 rounds without any bid. It has happened in at least 14 FCC auctions. Furthermore, in the boilerplate of most FCC auctions the Wireless Bureau specifically reserves the right to change the rules of the auction, including reserve prices, even while it is in progress, in the case of Auction 73 even “on a license-by-license or package-by-package” basis.
I think that you are confusing reserve prices with minimum acceptable bids. The FCC's system does change the minimum acceptable bid depending on activity, but it has NEVER changed the reserve prices during an auction (and only rarely had reserve prices). Understanding the rules is critical to analyzing the auction.
Actually, I am not confusing reserve prices with minimum acceptable bids. I did not state my point clearly above. I am suggesting that the rules for Auction 73 authorise the Wireless Bureau to do as it has done numerous times with minimum acceptable bids (in a minimum of 14 auctions, I recall) with the reserve prices. I, too, am not a lawyer, but I've consulted an attorney who is intimately familiar with the rules and he concurs in my judgment on this.
The Bureau certainly has the authority to reduce reserves and minimum opening bids - the key is that they haven't exercised that authority in the past. With regard to adjusting bid increments, this auction is the first time the FCC is controlling all of the variables on a license specific level. They often adjust the increments during the auction, and it is much less major than adjusting either minimum opening bids or reserve prices.
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Sorry for the really basic question, but what's the point in bidding under the reserve price?