“…Such an attenuation of bid shading is offset, however, by information asymmetries among bidders in an English open‐bid auction setting (Bick, Crook, Lynch, & Walkup, ; Cramton, ; Kagel & Levin, ; Klemperer, ). As indicated in Bick et al () in reference to an English auction setting: ‘In the presence of high cross‐sectional dispersion in information, the winner's curse discourages uninformed traders from bidding, lowering the asset's price.’ They suggest that in English open‐bid outcry auctions the presence of informed bidders either ‘drives up asset prices or lowers them, depending on the magnitude of the information asymmetry surrounding the asset.’ In the context of low information asymmetry, in an ascending bid auction, uninformed bidders are unconcerned with the winner's curse and place high bids, driving up the asset's price. In the context of high information asymmetry, as we argue prevailed in the Dublin auction rooms, the winner's curse discourages uninformed traders from bidding, lowering the asset's price.…”