Question 5. You are trying to estimate a price per share on an initial public offering of a company involved in environmental waste disposal. The company has a book value per share of $20 and earned $3.50 per share in the most recent time period. While it does not pay dividends, the capital expenditures per share were $2.50 higher than depreciation per share in the most recent period, and the firm uses no debt financing. Analysts project that earnings for the company will grow 25% a year for the next five years. You have data on other companies in the environment waste disposal business: Company Price BV/Share EPS DPS Beta Expected Growth Air & Water $9.60 $8.48 $0.40 $0.00 1.65 10.50% Allwaste $5.40 $3.10 $0.25 $0.00 1.1 18.50% Browning Ferris $29.00 $11.50 $1.45 $0.68 1.25 11.00% Chemical Waste $9.40 $3.75 $0.45 $0.15 1.15 2.50% Groundwater $15.00 $14.45 $0.65 $0.00 1 3.00% Intn'l Tech. $3.30 $3.35 $0.16 $0.00 1.1 11.00% Ionics Inc. $48.00 $31.00 $2.20 $0.00 1 14.50% Laidlaw Inc. $6.30 $5.85 $0.40 $0.12 1.15 8.50% OHM Corp. $16.00 $5.65 $0.60 $0.00 1.15 9.50% Rollins $5.10 $3.65 $0.05 $0.00 1.3 1.00% Safety-Kleen $14.00 $9.25 $0.80 $0.36 1.15 6.50% The average debt/equity ratio of these firms is 20%, and the tax rate is 40%. a) Estimate the average price/book value ratio for these comparable firms. Would you use this average P/BV ratio to price the initial public offering? b) What subjective adjustments would you make to the price/book value ratio for this firm and why? c) Using a multiple regression, specify the relationship between P/BV ratios and fundamentals in this peer group. What do the coefficients on the regression signify? How would you use the regression to make an estimate of the P/BV ratio for the IPO