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The Informational Role of Buyback Contracts

Author

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  • Shouqiang Wang

    (Naveen Jindal School of Management, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas 75080;)

  • Haresh Gurnani

    (Center for Retail Innovation, School of Business, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27106)

  • Upender Subramanian

    (Naveen Jindal School of Management, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas 75080;)

Abstract

Manufacturers often offer retailers buyback contracts to reduce retailers’ inventory costs by repurchasing unsold inventory at a prespecified returns price. We examine the signaling role of buyback contracts when the retailer is less informed about either the manufacturer’s reliability of honoring the buyback commitment (e.g., for a small/less-established manufacturer) or its product’s market potential (e.g., for a national brand manufacturer). We find that these two situations yield contrasting buyback designs: the manufacturer must distort the wholesale and returns prices downward to signal higher reliability, but upward to signal higher market potential. Nevertheless, the signaling mechanism in both cases hinges on suitably distorting the manufacturer’s returns cost (i.e., the cost of repurchasing a retailer’s unsold inventory) by influencing the retailer’s regular stock (i.e., the portion of inventory carried to meet average demand) and safety stock (i.e., the extra inventory carried to meet potential high demand). Notably, although prior research has highlighted the signaling role of the wholesale price, we show how and why, in a channel with inventory, the returns price plays a relatively more important role. In particular, efficient signaling entails that the returns price is used to distort the manufacturer’s returns cost, whereas the wholesale price is used only to mitigate the resulting distortion in the retailer’s order quantity. In fact, the returns price emerges as a more efficient signaling instrument and reverses the direction of wholesale price distortion from what is necessary if wholesale price alone is used to signal. We also examine the implications when the two dimensions of manufacturer’s private information are correlated.

Suggested Citation

  • Shouqiang Wang & Haresh Gurnani & Upender Subramanian, 2021. "The Informational Role of Buyback Contracts," Management Science, INFORMS, vol. 67(1), pages 279-296, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:inm:ormnsc:v:67:y:2021:i:1:p:279-296
    DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.2019.3552
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    3. Shizhen Bai & Xuelian Jia, 2023. "The Impact of the Cost-Sharing Contract on Capital-Constrained Agricultural Supply Chains," SAGE Open, , vol. 13(1), pages 21582440231, February.
    4. Hong Zheng & Lin Tian & Guo Li, 2023. "A bane or a boon? Profit‐margin‐guarantee contract in a channel with downstream competition," Production and Operations Management, Production and Operations Management Society, vol. 32(7), pages 2087-2100, July.
    5. Huibing Cheng & Shanshui Zheng, 2022. "Incentive Compensation Mechanism for the Infrastructure Construction of Electric Vehicle Battery Swapping Station under Asymmetric Information," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(12), pages 1-18, June.

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