Dutch Auction
An
auction of a
new issue of
securities where the highest
price offered to
buy a portion of the issue becomes the price at which the entire issue is sold. Dutch auctions are particularly important because they are the means used to
sell new issues of
U.S. Treasury securities. A Dutch auction begins with the securities offered at a high price and the price is gradually lowered until there is a
bid. This contrasts with a commercial option that begins at a low price that is gradually raised.
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Dutch auction
An auction in which the seller reduces the offering price until a level can be found that clears the market. This is the price at which all sales will take place. The auction for Treasury bills is similar to this except that the Treasury accepts the highest bids first and works through progressively lower bids until an issue is completely sold. Thus, in a Treasury bill auction, various prices are accepted.
Case Study Whittaker Corporation announced plans in 1986 to sell several of its business units and use the proceeds to repurchase a significant proportion of its own outstanding stock. The stock buyback was to occur through a process by which Whittaker's shareholders could submit offers for varying numbers of shares at various prices. A shareholder might submit an offer to sell 500 shares at $35; 500 shares at $34; and 500 shares at $33, for example. Depending on the number of available shares and the prices offered by the shareholders, Whittaker would then set a price at which it would purchase the stock. Thus, if Whittaker set a price of $34.75, the shareholder would sell 1,000 shares (those offered at $34.75 or less) at a price of $34.75 each. Whittaker undertook the Dutch auction to determine the lowest price at which it could buy back the desired number of shares.
Wall Street Words: An A to Z Guide to Investment Terms for Today's Investor by David L. Scott. Copyright © 2003 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. All rights reserved.
Dutch auction.
A Dutch auction opens at the highest price and drops gradually until there's a buyer willing to pay the amount being asked. The transaction is completed at that price.
The only securities auctions in US markets that are conducted as Dutch auctions are the competitive bids for US Treasury bills, notes, and bonds.
In contrast, a conventional commercial auction begins with the lowest price, which gradually increases as potential buyers bid against each other. The selling price is determined when no bidder will top the last offer on the table.
A double-action auction -- the system in place on US stock exchanges -- features many buyers and sellers bidding against each other to close a sale at a mutually agreed-upon price.
Dutch auction
see AUCTION.Collins Dictionary of Economics, 4th ed. © C. Pass, B. Lowes, L. Davies 2005
Dutch auction
An auction in which the asking price is lowered gradually until someone is willing to pay at that level, and the property is then sold to that person. Contrast with the typical auction practice in which the auctioneer asks a high price,lowers it until someone places a bid,and then the auctioneer attempts to obtain higher bids to increase the price from there.
The Complete Real Estate Encyclopedia by Denise L. Evans, JD & O. William Evans, JD. Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.