Pool Formation with Three Patent Owners
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Setup
2.1. Lerner and Tirole (2004)’s Model
- (a)
- Pools compete by setting prices () simultaneously, where is patent i’s price. (We assume that a pool’s profit is equally shared by all owners within this pool.9 Thus, owners within one pool aim to maximize their joint profit.)
- (b)
- Licensee selects a basket of patents according to the following maximization problem:
- (c)
- Licensee employs the technology and pays the prices for if and only if . That is, without using any patent, the surplus of each licensee is zero. This decision is licensee-specific.
2.2. Synergism
- (1)
- The equilibrium profit of either pool under I-structure is .
- (2)
- If , there exist infinitely many equilibria under F-structure such that the profit of one owner is and the profit of either of the other two owners is , where . Otherwise, the equilibrium profit of each owner under F-structure is .
2.3. Pool Formation Games
- if there is a unique equilibrium under F-structure; otherwise, is a subset of (to be specified later).
- For , is owner i’s equilibrium profit under .
3. Stable Pool Structures: Equilibrium Binding Agreements
- (C1)
- for all .
- (C2)
- For , if there are no and such that .
- (C3)
- if neither of the following holds:
- (C3.1)
- There are and such that and ;
- (C3.2)
- There are () and such that and . (Note that implies that .)
4. Market Power and Stable Pool Structures
- (1)
- When the identity and level of market power are predetermined, stability is sufficient to ensure that the complete pool is welfare-maximizing, echoing our findings in Proposition 1.
- (2)
- The stable incomplete pool structure can never be welfare-maximizing. (Actually, regardless of whether the incomplete pool structure is stable, the total price of all three patents under this structure is consistently higher than that of the complete pool in any pool formation game analyzed in this paper; see proofs of Propositions 1 and 6.)
- (3)
- Stability is neither sufficient nor necessary for F-structure to be welfare-maximizing. However, F-structure can be both stable and welfare-maximizing for with , a proper subset of , when the value of the technology embodying all three patents is sufficiently low (i.e., ).
Alternative Games Regarding Market Power
5. Discussion
5.1. Synergistic Two-Patent Combination
5.2. Sequential Bargaining as an Alternative Protocol
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- (1)
- The equilibrium price of either pool is under I-structure.
- (2)
- If , there exist infinitely many equilibria under F-structure such that one owner sets the price of and the other two owners set the price of , where . Otherwise, each owner sets the equilibrium price of under F-structure.
- (S1)
- All owners set . Then every competition margin is .
- (S2)
- Two owners set competition margins, say, and , and one owner sets . However, we can show that . Clearly, , and . Assume . Then , implying that . This violates . Hence, , and , and . If , then . So . If , then . Hence, , and we instead consider the following scenario.
- (S3)
- All owners set their respective competition margins (without loss of generality, let ). Then, , and .
- If , by Lemma 2, and . Hence, (C3.2) does not hold and .
- If , by Lemma 2, for all and . That is, for all and all . Hence, (C3.2) holds and .
- If , we can show that . Suppose by contradiction that (C3.2) does not hold; i.e., there exist () and such that and . If , by Lemma 2, , contradicting . If with , by Lemma 2, , contradicting .
- If , by Lemma 2, for and . That is, for all and all . Hence, (C3.2) holds and .
- If , by Lemma 2, and for some . Hence, (C3.2) does not hold and .
- If , by Lemma 2, for , and . That is, for all and all . Hence, (C3.2) holds and .
- If , by the facts that is a subset of and (C3.2) does not hold for , (C3.2) does not hold for either. Hence, .
- (1)
- If , the equilibrium profit of either pool under I-structure is . Otherwise, the equilibrium profit of the stand-alone owner is and that of the incomplete pool is .
- (2)
- If , the equilibrium profit of each owner under F-structure is . Otherwise, it is .
- (1)
- If , the equilibrium price of either pool is under I-structure. Otherwise, the stand-alone owner sets the equilibrium price of and the equilibrium price of the incomplete pool is .
- (2)
- If , each owner sets the equilibrium price of under F-structure. Otherwise, it is .
- If , by Lemma A1(2). If , and for . (Moreover, (C3.1) holds.) Because for all , (C3.2) holds and . If , for . Because , it can be shown that . Hence, .
- If , by Lemma A1(2). Because , for . Note thatThus, if , ; otherwise, .
- (i.e., , ). If the first owner chooses 3, 2, or 1, respectively, the resulting pool structure is C, I, or I (the second owner choosing 2 is subgame-perfect), respectively, and the profit of the first owner is , , or , respectively. Hence, the first owner choosing 3 is subgame perfect.
- (i.e., , ). If the first owner chooses 3, 2, or 1, respectively, the resulting pool structure is C, I, or F (the second owner choosing 1 is subgame-perfect), respectively, and the profit of the first owner is , , or , respectively. Hence, the first owner choosing 1 is subgame-perfect, and the resulting pool structure is F.
- (i.e., ). If the first owner chooses 3, 2, or 1, respectively, the resulting pool structure is C, I, or F (the second owner choosing 1 is subgame-perfect), respectively, and the profit of the first owner is , , or , respectively. Hence, the first owner choosing 3 is subgame perfect.
- (i.e., ; or ). If the first owner chooses 3, 2, or 1, respectively, the resulting pool structure is C, I, or I (the second owner choosing 2 is subgame-perfect), respectively, and the profit of the first owner is , , or , respectively. Note that the first owner choosing 3 is never subgame perfect, and choosing 2 or 1 results in I-structure. Hence, the resulting pool structure of a subgame-perfect equilibrium must be I.
1 | The research question of endogenous patent pool formation is not new. Lerner and Tirole (2004) note that: “In practice, pools may be formed with a subset of the relevant patents, which raises the interesting issue of holdouts.” Quint (2014) writes: “I do not attempt to explicitly model pool formation or predict which pool or pools will form in a given setting. My model defines a mapping from coalition structures (a particular pool or set of pools) to payoffs (patent-holder profit and consumer surplus); any cooperative or noncooperative model of coalition formation could therefore be applied, taking these payoffs as given, to attempt to answer this question.” However, answers to this question are rare (see more discussion on the existing literature in this section). |
2 | |
3 | An example of a non-complete pool is the Third Generation Patent Platform Partnership (3G3P) (see, e.g., Guellec and de la Potterie (2007)). |
4 | In our context, this is the scenario in which “demand margins” (see Proof of Lemma 1) bind for all patent pools under every feasible pool structure. |
5 | Also, a numerical analysis like Ray and Vohra (1997) seems impossible here, since an explicit solution to Lerner and Tirole (2004)’s model, which is essential for the analysis of coalition formation, is absent. |
6 | For other literature on different aspects of patent pools, see references of the papers we cite. One prominent strand of the literature, among others, links patent pool formation to standard setting; see, e.g., Lévêque and Ménière (2011), Llanes and Poblete (2014), and Lerner and Tirole (2015). |
7 | This distribution satisfies the technical assumptions in Lerner and Tirole (2004). |
8 | In this sense, patents are symmetric in importance. Also, see Lerner and Tirole (2004) for a thorough discussion on separable licensee preferences. |
9 | Equal payoff division within a coalition can sometimes be vindicated endogenously; see Ray and Vohra (1997) and Ray and Vohra (1999). In this paper, because each owner owns only one patent, this equal sharing rule is no different from the numeric proportional rule, which requires that each pool member receive a share of the pool’s profit equal to its share of the pool’s patents. |
10 | To break a tie when there exist multiple maximizing baskets, licensees choose the basket with the largest number of patents. |
11 | If there are owners with positive sales in equilibrium, then all owners have positive sales. See footnote 12 in Lerner and Tirole (2004). |
12 | One may consider defining synergism by using . However, if , then and our definition is a weak one in this sense. (We also investigate the situation with in Section 5). We do not use or in this definition, because neither is lower than for any parameter combination. |
13 | This assumption also aligns with an important concept in Lerner and Tirole (2004). As demonstrated in Proof of Lemma 1, “demand margins” bind for both pools under an incomplete pool structure if and only if the three-patent combination is synergistic. |
14 | This is because the former attains its global minimum at , and the latter attains its global maximum at . |
15 | This requirement of uniqueness is not new to the coalition formation literature (e.g., Diamantoudi and Xue (2007)). |
16 | Our aim is not to explicitly model the possession of market power by certain owners. This is a related but distinct research question that requires new game-theoretic modeling. |
17 | does not exist. |
18 | For applications, see, e.g., Bloch (1995), Yi (1998), Morasch (2000), Ray and Vohra (2001), and Greenlee (2005). Ray (2007)’s book is entirely devoted to two coalition formation protocols: the blocking approach (e.g., equilibrium binding agreements) and the bargaining approach; see also Ray and Vohra (2015). |
19 | It is also required that be equal for all and be equal for all . This condition always holds with three owners for any parameter combination. |
20 | See, also, Shen and Qu (2025)’s Proposition 6. |
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Patent Pool Structure | Partitions | Notation |
---|---|---|
Complete pool | C | |
Incomplete pool structures | ||
Fragmented pool structure | F |
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Liu, H.; Qian, X.; Qu, C.; Shen, J. Pool Formation with Three Patent Owners. Games 2025, 16, 35. https://doi.org/10.3390/g16040035
Liu H, Qian X, Qu C, Shen J. Pool Formation with Three Patent Owners. Games. 2025; 16(4):35. https://doi.org/10.3390/g16040035
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Hao, Xuewen Qian, Chen Qu, and Jingyi Shen. 2025. "Pool Formation with Three Patent Owners" Games 16, no. 4: 35. https://doi.org/10.3390/g16040035
APA StyleLiu, H., Qian, X., Qu, C., & Shen, J. (2025). Pool Formation with Three Patent Owners. Games, 16(4), 35. https://doi.org/10.3390/g16040035