Advanced Topics in Business Strategy Flashcards

1
Q

What is Limit Pricing and what is the key question of it?

A
  • A strategy where an incumbent maintains a price below the monopoly price level in order to prevent entry
    • Not profit max given the current market structure of one firm
    • Profit max only if changing the number of firms in the long run
  • Question: how much output to produce to make entry unprofitable?
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2
Q

What does the incumbent want to do when limit pricing and what is the outcome?

A
  • The incumbent wants to shift the residual demand curve such that it is below the AC (assumed same for both firms)
  • Therefore produce more than Qm and sell at lower P
  • Profit is lower than at monopoly production
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3
Q

How can the incumbent maximise his situation in Limit Pricing and what is required to do so?

A
  • Assuming perfect information (about demand and costs), the incumbent can do even better by producing Qm and threatening to increase output to QL if entry were to occur
    • Problem: this requires a strong credibility
      • Meaning in the subgame where entry does occur, the entrant expects the incumbent to behave rationally (max profit)
      • Mere threat of limit pricing is not credible if it is not in the incumbent’s best interest to carry out the threat (cannot be sustained as a SPNE if this is the case)
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4
Q

What are the possible channels to make limit pricing work?

A
  • Commitment mechanisms
    • Has to make producing QL the best response upon entry
  • Leaning curves effects
    • Costs reduces with more output
    • May be credible to produce more for the cost advantage
  • Incomplete informaiton
    • Incumbent has more info about D or its own costs
  • Reputation effects
    • Different types of incumbent, try to signal that it is an aggressive incumbent
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5
Q

How can irreversibility be achieved in regards to limit pricing?

A
  • Quantities: install production capacity (+ sunk costs (can’t shut down production))
  • Prices: ‘most favoured customer clause’, print catalogues
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6
Q

When is limit pricing profitable?

A
  • Limit pricing is profitable when (πL - πD)/i > πM - πL
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7
Q

What are the conditions which make limit pricing attractive?

A
  • Low interest rate environments
  • Monopoly and limit-price profits are close
    • Limit pricing not so costly
  • Duopoly profits are significantly lower than limit-price profits
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8
Q

What is predatory pricing?

A
  • A firm temporarily prices below its marginal cost to drive existing competitors out of th emarket
  • Involves a trade off between current and future profits, so it is profitable only when the present value of the higher future profits offsets the losses required to drive rivals out of the market
  • A firm engaging in predatory pricing must have deeper pockets than the prety
  • Hard to identify. Competitive vs anti
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9
Q

Broadly what are the strategies for raising rival’s costs?

A
  • Strategies involving marginal cost
  • Strategies involving fixed cost
  • Strategies for vertically integrated firms
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10
Q

How can rival’s costs be raised through marginal cost?

A
  • This can be done where capital vs labour needs differ etc.

- Lobby for higher wages if you’re capital intensive in a labour intensive industry

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11
Q

How can rival’s costs be raised through fixed costs?

A
  • (or entry costs)

- If the incumbent advertises, entrant is incentivised to not enter

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12
Q

How can rival’s costs be raised through a firm’s vertical integration?

A
  • A vertically integrated firm with market power in the upstream market may be able to exploit this power to raise rivals’ costs in the downstream markets
  • Vertical foreclosure
    • Strategy wherein a vertically integrated firm charges downstream rivals a prohibitive price for an essential input, thus forcing rivals to use more costly substitutes or go out of business
  • Price-cost squeeze
    • Tactic used by a vertically integrated firm to squeeze the margins of its competitors
    • Raising the input price while lowering (or holding constant) the final product p, squeezes the margins of the downstream competitors
    • Making available to the downstream only firm: p - c, where p is the final product price and c is the input price
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13
Q

What is the relationship between price discrimination and aggressive price/cost strategies?

A
  • Enhances the profitability of predatory pricing, limit pricing and raising rivals’ costs
  • Means prism only have to lower prices to targeted consumer groups and mitigates the negative aspects of limit pricing and predatory pricing
  • e.g. promotional deals for new customer
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14
Q

What is a second mover advantage?

A
  • Can permit a firm to earn a higher payoff
  • Free riding on the investments made by the first mover and produce at lower costs, e.g. R&D spillover and imitation
  • Price Cutting
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15
Q

What are direct network externalities?

A
  • The direct value enjoyed by the user of a network because others also use the network
  • Value increases the more users there are
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16
Q

What are indirect network externalities?

A
  • The indirect value enjoyed by the user of a network because of complementaries between the size of a network and the availability of complementary products or services
  • Game consoles and available games
  • People using iPhone and available iPhone apps
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17
Q

What are negative network externalities?

A
  • Exist when an additional user to the network decreases the value per user of the services
  • Congestion
  • Bottlenecks: internet speed, airline landings
18
Q

What is the relationship between first mover advantages and network externalities and what is the solution?

A
  • The presence of positive network externaltieis often make it difficult for new networks to replace or compete with existing networks; even a technologically superior one
  • Existing networks likely have an installed user base and complementary services compared to a new network
  • Network externalities can create consumer lock in: consumers may be a stuck in a situation (equilibrium) where they are using an inferior network
  • Penetrate pricing
    • Involves charging a low price (may be below MC) initially to penetrate a market and gain a critical mass of customers; useful when strong network effects are present
19
Q

How is changing FC helpful?

A

ONLY to deter entry

20
Q

What is the difference between predatory pricing and penetrative pricing?

A

Networks: Value increases more customers

P

21
Q

How can a merger punish another downstream firm?

A
  • Refuse to sell
  • Decreases competition in upstream market therefore increasing price
  • Increase price on it’s own and other upstreams will have incentive to do the same?
22
Q

If a firm can pay to be the first entrant, what is the comparison?

A

Cournot vs Stackelberg

23
Q

Why is a Nash eqm not necessarily a SPNE?

A

Nash equilibria can be supported by non-credible threats in subgames not reached in equilibrium

24
Q

What are the steps to a capacity constraint question?

A
  1. Inverse Demand
  2. MC = MR
  3. This Q hit capacity?

If not - Q and P @ MC = MR
If so - plug capacity Q into DEMAND to get P
- Works like this because MC vertical at Qcap

25
Q

How are more than 2 firms in oligopoly questions dealt with?

A

Cournot in eqm q2 = q3

  1. Replace q3 with q2 in BR2
  2. Rewrite BR2 so only in terms of q1
  3. Use this (x2) in Leaders BR

i.e. rewrite BR2(as a function of q1 and q3) replacing q3 with q2 (so that BR2 is only a function of q1)

26
Q

Why can high prices be sustained with price matching?

A

Use of a implicit trigger strategy
Infinitely repeated games give incentive to cooperate
Ease of monitoring

27
Q

If one firm in an implicit collusive partnership is closing down, what happens?

A

Other firm’s optimal strategy will be to defect

28
Q

What is depreciation?

A

A sunk cost, not relevant in production decisions

29
Q

What is FC as a function of depreciation?

A

FC/q = depreciation

30
Q

When there are multiple outcomes of quantity decisions between two firms, what needs to be done?

A

Normal form representation

31
Q

What is the profit in 2nd degree price discrimination 2 part tariffing?

A

P = MC: π = 2x the CS of the low demand consumer

P > MC: π = 2x CS of low demand consumer + area between P and MC: x 2 for area left of low demand consumer’s QD at this price and x 1 to the right

32
Q

What is the most important thing about consumer choice questions?

A

BC’s are always parallel unless Px/Py changes

33
Q

What is true about P2 Nash elms?

A

ALWAYS has >1 letter

34
Q

For sequential games, how should Nash eqm be found and how should SPNE be found?

A

Nash eqm - transfer to normal form

SPNE - Use long form backward induction

35
Q

How should sequential games be transferred to normal form and how should they be solved?

A

P1: (A), (B)
P2: (W if A, Y if B), (X if A, Y if B) (W if A, Z if B) (X if A, Z if B)

  • If we’re here, can either improve? - ONLY APPLIES TO NORMAL NASH EQM
36
Q

Given a relatively higher use of K, what is MPL?

A

Higher

37
Q

How are multiplant questions solved?

A
MR = MC1 = MC2
i.e.
MR = a - b(Q1 + Q2) = cQ1 = dQ2
Q1 = (d/c)Q2
MR = a - b((d/c)Q2 + Q2) etc.
38
Q

What does irreversibility in limit pricing achieve?

A

Makes the threat credible

39
Q

What are the steps to solving values of C to make rivals raising MC profitable?

A
  1. BR1 w/ -c in P
  2. BR2 w/ new MC
  3. BR1 by subs (result in terms of c)
  4. BR2 by subs (result in terms of c)
  5. P by subs BR1 and BR2 (result in terms of c)
  6. π w/ -c in P
  7. Solve c to πc > πno c
40
Q

What is the first step to Profit Br questions?

A

Incorporate MC into P