Browse Economics

Market Competition and Pricing

Supply, demand, pricing, auction, concentration, market power, and competition terms relevant to finance.

Market Competition and Pricing covers supply, demand, competition, market power, pricing behavior, auctions, information problems, regulation, and market-failure concepts used in finance.

Use these pages when a term changes pricing power, revenue assumptions, cost pass-through, market structure, auction outcomes, consumer behavior, or regulatory exposure. It sits inside Economics, so readers can move up when the broader economics context matters.

This landing page points readers toward Auctions and Bidding Mechanisms, Competition, Market Power, and Industry Structure, Information Asymmetry and Market Failure, Market Demand and Price Formation, and Regulated Pricing and Rate Controls. Choose the narrower page when the term changes the evidence source, calculation, institution, market convention, risk exposure, or decision being made.

What This Branch Covers

AreaUse it for
Auctions and Bidding MechanismsAuction and bidding mechanism terms used in securities, procurement, and market-design contexts.
Competition, Market Power, and Industry StructureCompetition, concentration, barriers to entry, and industry-structure terms used in finance analysis.
Information Asymmetry and Market FailureMarket-failure, signaling, pooling, separating, and lemons-market terms used in finance.
Market Demand and Price FormationMarket demand, supply-demand, price, and price-formation terms used in market analysis.
Regulated Pricing and Rate ControlsPrice-control, rate-case, regulated-pricing, and price-war terms relevant to finance.

What to Check

  • Market definition and relevant competitors.
  • Supply, demand, elasticity, margin, or price-setting evidence.
  • Auction, contract, platform, or regulation involved.
  • Information asymmetry, externality, or market-power issue.
  • Valuation, credit, pricing, or policy conclusion affected.

Common Mistakes

  • Using a market-structure label without defining the market.
  • Assuming price increases always mean monopoly power.
  • Ignoring elasticity, substitutes, regulation, and data limits.
  • Mixing consumer behavior concepts with securities-market execution concepts.

Market-competition content is educational and does not provide antitrust, legal, pricing, or investment advice.

In this section

Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.

Auctions

Auction and bidding mechanism terms used in securities, procurement, and market-design contexts.

Market Power

Competition, concentration, barriers to entry, and industry-structure terms used in finance analysis.

Market Failure

Market-failure, signaling, pooling, separating, and lemons-market terms used in finance.

Price Formation

Market demand, supply-demand, price, and price-formation terms used in market analysis.

Rate Controls

Price-control, rate-case, regulated-pricing, and price-war terms relevant to finance.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026