Shared Bidding Algorithms and Competition: Evidence from Electricity Markets
Abstract
Competing firms increasingly delegate pricing and bidding decisions to algorithms supplied by the same third-party providers.
We study whether a shared algorithm leads competitors to internalise one another's profits, using data from the Australian National Electricity Market, where every battery's bids are observed at 5-minute frequency and can be linked to an identifiable autobidding provider.
Bids constructed by the same provider co-move, and do so more strongly after a disclosure reform made the common scarcity state easier to observe: the same information that steers batteries towards efficient arbitrage also synchronises the bids of competitors who share a provider.
To separate co-movement due to shared information from joint profit maximisation, we estimate each battery's dynamic value of stored energy and reclear the market under counterfactual bids.
Owner-level profits cannot rationalise observed bidding: batteries forgo profitable dispatch where it would depress the prices earned by same-provider batteries owned by rival firms, and the estimated weight on those rivals' profits is close to one.
We find evidence of this conduct only where a provider's share of near-margin battery capacity exceeds roughly 30%, corresponding to an installed share of roughly 20%.
The identified conduct costs consumers an annualised $5.5 million on the current fleet, and it arises at the level of the algorithm provider rather than the asset owner, a layer that ownership-based concentration screens do not capture.
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