LGGTMADec 1, 2025

How Market Volatility Shapes Algorithmic Collusion: A Comparative Analysis of Learning-Based Pricing Algorithms

arXiv:2512.02134v1h-index: 9
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This research addresses the problem of understanding algorithmic collusion in digital markets for regulators and economists, though it represents an incremental application of existing methods to new market scenarios.

This paper analyzed how four learning-based pricing algorithms behave in different market structures under demand volatility, finding that reinforcement learning algorithms often sustain supra-competitive prices with DDPG showing the most collusive tendencies, and that demand shocks produce varied effects across market types while algorithm rankings remain consistent.

Autonomous pricing algorithms are increasingly influencing competition in digital markets; however, their behavior under realistic demand conditions remains largely unexamined. This paper offers a thorough analysis of four pricing algorithms -- Q-Learning, PSO, Double DQN, and DDPG -- across three classic duopoly models (Logit, Hotelling, Linear) and under various demand-shock regimes created by auto-regressive processes. By utilizing profit- and price-based collusion indices, we investigate how the interactions among algorithms, market structure, and stochastic demand collaboratively influence competitive outcomes. Our findings reveal that reinforcement-learning algorithms often sustain supra-competitive prices under stable demand, with DDPG demonstrating the most pronounced collusive tendencies. Demand shocks produce notably varied effects: Logit markets suffer significant performance declines, Hotelling markets remain stable, and Linear markets experience shock-induced profit inflation. Despite marked changes in absolute performance, the relative rankings of the algorithms are consistent across different environments. These results underscore the critical importance of market structure and demand uncertainty in shaping algorithmic competition, while also contributing to the evolving policy discussions surrounding autonomous pricing behavior.

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