Committed versus Contingent Pricing under Competition

52 Pages Posted: 6 Sep 2012 Last revised: 2 Oct 2013

See all articles by Zizhuo Wang

Zizhuo Wang

The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen

Ming Hu

University of Toronto - Rotman School of Management

Date Written: October 1, 2013

Abstract

Should capacitated firms set prices responsively to uncertain market conditions in a competitive environment? We study a duopoly selling differentiated substitutable products with fixed capacities under demand uncertainty, where firms can either commit to a fixed price ex ante, or elect to price contingently ex post, e.g., to charge high prices in booming markets, and low prices in slack markets. Interestingly, we analytically show that even for completely symmetric model primitives, asymmetric equilibria of strategic pricing decisions may arise, in which one firm commits statically and the other firm prices contingently; in this case, there also exists a unique mixed strategy equilibrium. Such equilibrium behavior tends to emerge, when capacity is ampler, and products are less differentiated or demand uncertainty is lower. With asymmetric fixed capacities, if demand uncertainty is low, a unique asymmetric equilibrium emerges, in which the firm with more capacity chooses committed pricing and the firm with less capacity chooses contingent pricing. We identify two countervailing profit effects of contingent pricing under competition: gains from responsively charging high price under high demand, and losses from intensified price competition under low demand. It is the latter detrimental effect that may prevent both firms from choosing a contingent pricing strategy in equilibrium. We caution that responsive price changes under aggressive competition of less differentiated products can result in profit-killing discounting. We show that our results remain valid when capacity decisions are endogenized.

Suggested Citation

Wang, Zizhuo and Hu, Ming, Committed versus Contingent Pricing under Competition (October 1, 2013). Rotman School of Management Working Paper No. 2142725, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2142725 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2142725

Zizhuo Wang

The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen ( email )

2001 Longxiang Road
Longgang District
Shenzhen, Guangdong 517182
China

Ming Hu (Contact Author)

University of Toronto - Rotman School of Management ( email )

105 St. George st
Toronto, ON M5S 3E6
Canada
416-946-5207 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://ming.hu

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