Hebei Metals & Minerals Import & Export Corp v. United States , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 1185 ( 2004 )


Menu:
  •                                        Slip Op. 04–88
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    ________________________________________
    :
    HEBEI METALS & MINERALS IMPORT & :
    EXPORT CORPORATION AND HEBEI            :
    WUXIN METALS & MINERALS TRADING :
    CO., LTD.,                              :
    :
    Plaintiff,            :
    :                   Court No. 03–00442
    v.                    :
    :
    UNITED STATES,                          :
    :
    Defendant.            :
    _______________________________________ :
    [Antidumping duty determination remanded for recalculation of duty.]
    Dated: July 19, 2004
    Grunfeld, Desiderio, Lebowitz, Silverman & Klestadt LLP, (Bruce M. Mitchell, Mark E.
    Pardo, and Paul G. Figueroa) for plaintiff.
    Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, David M. Cohen, Director, Jeanne E.
    Davidson, Deputy Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States
    Department of Justice (David S. Silverbrand), Christine J. Sohar, Attorney, Office of the Chief
    Counsel for Import Administration, United States Department of Commerce, of counsel, for
    defendant.
    OPINION
    RESTANI, Chief Judge:
    INTRODUCTION
    Under 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1)(B) (2000), an antidumping duty imposed on a product
    exported from a nonmarket economy (“NME”) country is calculated using surrogate values from
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                 PAGE 2
    an appropriate market economy country or countries. Plaintiffs Hebei Metals & Minerals Import
    & Export Corporation and Hebei Wuxin Metals & Minerals Trading Co., Ltd. (referred to
    collectively hereinafter as “Hebei”) move for judgment on the agency record that the United
    States Department of Commerce (“Commerce”) improperly calculated the antidumping duty
    imposed on its lawn and garden steel fence posts from the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”),
    an NME country. Three aspects of Commerce’s duty calculation are at issue: (1) the use of an
    Indian import price rather than an Indian domestic price for the surrogate coal value; (2) the
    refusal to exclude as aberrational a Swedish import value from the surrogate value for steel pallet
    packing materials; and (3) the removal of internal consumption from raw material expenditures
    in the calculation of surrogate ratios for general expenses and profit. These decisions cannot be
    sustained.
    First, Commerce used the Indian import price for the surrogate coal value, but failed to
    provide substantial evidence demonstrating why imported coal yielded a more accurate surrogate
    value than domestic coal.
    Second, Commerce chose not to exclude the Swedish import value from the surrogate
    value for steel pallets, but the Government fails to provide a reasonable explanation why this
    uniquely high-priced/low-volume import value was not aberrational.
    Third, Commerce removed internal raw material consumption from its surrogate ratio
    calculations, even though it lacked substantial evidence to demonstrate internal consumption’s
    significance and how its removal from the denominator would increase the accuracy of the ratios.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 3
    Accordingly, the case is remanded for reconsideration and action consistent with this
    opinion.
    BACKGROUND
    Commerce’s antidumping investigation determined that Hebei and other manufacturers of
    lawn and garden steel fence posts from the PRC had sold their products at less than fair value,
    based on a normal value calculation using surrogate values from India. Final Determination of
    Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Lawn and Garden Fence Posts from the People’s Republic of
    China, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 20,373
     (Dep’t Commerce April 25, 2003) [hereinafter Notice of Final
    Determination]. Commerce explained its conclusions in Decision Memorandum for the Final
    Determination of the Antidumping Duty Investigation of Lawn and Garden Steel Fence Posts
    from the People’s Republic of China (Dep’t Commerce April 18, 2003), P.R. 158, Pls.’ App., Ex.
    2 [hereinafter Decision Memorandum or Decision Mem.]. At issue here are Commerce’s final
    decisions regarding the calculation of the surrogate coal value, the surrogate steel pallets value,
    and the surrogate ratios. These final decisions were the culmination of an antidumping duty
    investigation initiated by a petition from Steel City Corporation. Petition (May 1, 2002), P.R.
    Doc. 1, Def.’s App., Tab 3.
    I.     THE ANTIDUMPING DUTY INVESTIGATION
    The period of investigation (“POI”) extended from October 1, 2001, through March 31,
    2002. Notice of Initiation of Antidumping Duty Investigation: Lawn & Garden Steel Fence Posts
    From the People’s Republic of China, 
    67 Fed. Reg. 37,388
    , 37,389 (Dep’t Commerce May 29,
    2002). The investigation sought to determine whether the subject merchandise was sold at less
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                PAGE 4
    than fair value, based on a comparison between the export price and normal value of the
    merchandise. See 
    id. at 37,390
    . Because Commerce considers the PRC to be a nonmarket
    economy country (“NME”), normal value was derived from factors of production as valued in
    India, a market economy country used as a surrogate for the PRC. 
    Id. at 37,390
    .
    At the invitation of Commerce, Hebei provided surrogate value information for the
    various factors used in the production of the subject fence posts. Letter from Grunfeld Desiderio
    to Commerce (Sep. 18, 2002), P.R. Doc. 67, Def.’s App., Tab 7 [hereinafter Hebei First
    Surrogate Data Submission]. This included a surrogate coal value derived from Indian domestic
    prices for “steam coal” published in the Tata Energy Research Institute’s (“TERI”) Energy Data
    Directory & Yearbook for 2000/2001. 
    Id.,
     Ex. 9, at 44, Def.’s App., Tab 7. For steel pallets used
    as packing materials, Hebei provided the import prices for scrap steel (HTS 7204.29.09)
    published in the 2000-2001 Monthly Statistics of Foreign Trade of India Volume II (“MSFTI” or
    “Indian Import Statistics”). 
    Id.,
     Ex. 17, Def.’s App., Tab 7. Hebei also submitted a copy of the
    2001 Annual Report of Surya Roshni Ltd., an Indian steel tube manufacturer, for use in
    calculating the surrogate ratios for selling, general and administrative expenses (SG&A), factory
    overhead, and profit. 
    Id.,
     Ex. 19, Def.’s App., Tab 7. The Surya Roshni Annual Report included
    a profit and loss statement (“Surya Roshni P&L Statement”) listing the income and expenditures
    for the year ended March 31, 2001. 
    Id.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                PAGE 5
    II.      THE PRELIMINARY DETERMINATION AND COMM ENT PERIOD
    After reviewing the parties’ submissions, Commerce issued its preliminary determination
    on December 4, 2002. Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and
    Postponement of Final Determination: Lawn and Garden Steel Fence Posts from the People’s
    Republic of China, 
    67 Fed. Reg. 72,141
     (Dep’t Commerce Dec. 4, 2002) [hereinafter Preliminary
    Determination], amended by Correction: Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
    Value and Postponement of Final Determination: Lawn and Garden Steel Fence Posts from the
    People’s Republic of China, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 8,737
     (Dep’t Commerce Feb. 25, 2003) (correcting the
    scope of the investigation to correspond with the International Trade Commission’s preliminary
    determination).
    Commerce valued coal using import prices for an “others” basket of coal (HTS
    2701.1909) as published in the 2001–2002 Indian Import Statistics. Memorandum Regarding
    Factors of Production Valuation for the Preliminary Results (Dep’t Commerce Nov. 27, 2002), at
    5–6 and Ex. Y, at 113–15, P. R. Doc. 104, Def.’s App., Tab 12 [hereinafter Preliminary FOP
    Mem.].
    The surrogate value of steel pallets was determined based on the MSFTI data for steel
    bars (HTS 7213) and seamless tubes/pipes (HTS 7304.9000) during April 2001 through
    December 2001. 
    Id.,
     at 3 n.5 and Ex. U, Def.’s App., Tab 12. The overall average price for
    seamless steel tubes/pipes was 70 rupees per kilogram (“Rs/Kg”) based on imports from 25
    countries, among which imports from Sweden had the highest price of 629 Rs/Kg. 
    Id.
    In calculating the surrogate ratios for SG&A, factory overhead, and profit—where the
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                PAGE 6
    formula calls for direct manufacturing expenses or material costs—Commerce used the figure
    from the “Raw Material Consumed” line-item in the Surya Roshni P&L Statement, which
    included costs attributed to internal consumption. 
    Id.,
     at 6 and Ex. Z, Def.’s App., Tab 12.
    In the subsequent comment period, Hebei challenged several aspects of the Preliminary
    Determination, including Commerce’s use of the Indian import price for imported coal. Brief
    from Grunfeld, Desiderio to Commerce (Mar. 13, 2003), at 9–11, P. R. Doc. 147 [hereinafter
    Hebei Case Br. to Commerce]. As for steel pallets, Hebei did not object to Commerce’s
    inclusion of imports from Sweden in the calculation of surrogate value, but submitted a new set
    of data for Indian imports of seamless tubes/pipes published in the World Trade Atlas, which was
    more contemporaneous with the POI than the data used in the Preliminary Determination. Letter
    from Grunfeld, Desiderio to Commerce (Jan. 21, 2003), at 2 and Ex. 12, P.R. Doc. 132, Def.’s
    App., Tab. 14. According to the new data, the average price for imports from 21 countries was
    82 Rs/Kg, among which imports from Sweden had the highest value: 706 Rs/Kg. 
    Id.
    Petitioner Steel City—in its comments regarding the calculation of surrogate ratios for
    SG&A, overhead, and profit—argued that Commerce should deduct from Surya’s raw material
    expenditures the amount shown for internal consumption on the Surya Roshni P&L Statement.
    Brief from Baker Hostetler to Commerce (Mar. 18, 2003), at 7–8, P. R. Doc. 150, Def.’s App.,
    Tab 15 [hereinafter Pet.’s Case Br. to Commerce].
    III.   THE FINAL DETERMINATION AND HEBEI’S MINISTERIAL ERROR ALLEGATIONS
    In the Final Determination, Commerce continued to value coal using the Indian import
    prices. Decision Mem., at cmt. 4 at 10–11, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Commerce rejected the TERI
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                   PAGE 7
    domestic coal prices for steam coal on the grounds that (1) there was no record showing that
    “steam coal, which is suitable for use in boiler generating steam and most often used for
    electricity generation, was used in the production process;” and (2) Hebei “did not demonstrate
    the ‘useful heat value’ (UHV) of the coal used in the production.” 
    Id.
    Commerce recalculated the steel pallets value using the new data submitted by Hebei
    because the new data was more contemporaneous with the POI than the data utilized in the
    Preliminary Determination. 
    Id.,
     at cmt. 3 at 9–10, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Commerce “examined the
    contemporaneous data and found that the values were based on a significant volume of imports
    from various market economy countries, and did not appear aberrational.” 
    Id.
    In evaluating the surrogate ratio calculations, Commerce recalculated the overhead and
    SG&A ratios by removing internal consumption from Surya’s raw material costs. 
    Id.,
     at cmt. 8 at
    15–16, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Commerce reasoned that:
    “Internal consumption,” in so far as it represents the use of raw materials to produce
    internal assets rather than finished products for sale, should not be applied to the cost
    of goods sold. Only those materials consumed in the production of finished goods
    should be included in the cost of goods sold. Likewise, if the material costs were
    increased to include internal transfers between factories or cost centers, only the net
    material cost figure would avoid double-counting material costs in the denominator
    of the financial ratios.
    
    Id.
    In response to the Final Determination, Hebei first alleged that Commerce committed a
    ministerial error by including the Swedish import value in its valuation of steel pallets. Letter
    from Grunfeld, Desiderio Regarding Clerical Errors in the Final Determination (April 28, 2003),
    at 5–6, P. R. Doc. 171, Pls.’ App., Tab 4. Specifically, Hebei argued that the steel tube imports
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 8
    from Sweden must be considered aberrational given Commerce’s other finding in the Final
    Determination that the Indian domestic price for powder coating submitted by Hebei as surrogate
    value was “aberrational” because it was 43% lower than the import price. 
    Id.
     Hebei claimed
    that, if a 43% difference constitutes the standard for an “aberrational” price, the Swedish steel
    tube import value should be disregarded as aberrational because it is 1,134% greater than the
    average of other countries’ import values. 
    Id.
    Commerce found no ministerial error, claiming that it intended to exclude from the
    calculation only those Indian imports sourced from NME countries and countries maintaining
    non-industry specific export subsidies, which might distort export prices. ITA Memo Re:
    Ministerial Error Allegations (May 12, 2003), at 4, P. R. Doc. 173, Pls.’ App., Ex. 5. Because
    the Swedish steel tube value did not fall into either category, Commerce found no reason to
    exclude it. 
    Id.
     Hebei then initiated a challenge to the Final Determination before the court.
    Hebei filed the instant motion for judgment on the agency record on November 21, 2003.
    IV.    JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The court has jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c) and 19 U.S.C. §
    1516a(a)(2)(B)(i), but the Government—citing the exhaustion doctrine—challenges the court’s
    power to review Commerce’s inclusion of a Swedish import price in the calculation of the
    surrogate steel pallets value. This issue is discussed infra at Part III(A). Commerce's
    antidumping duty calculation shall be sustained if it is supported by substantial evidence and is
    otherwise in accordance with law. See 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B) (1988).
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                   PAGE 9
    DISCUSSION
    I.     THE STATUTORY FRAMEWORK FOR NME ANTIDUMPING DUTY CALCULATIONS
    The antidumping duty represents the amount by which the “normal value” of the subject
    merchandise exceeds its “export price;” i.e., the price at which the merchandise was sold, or was
    threatened to be sold, in the United States. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1673
    . Where the exporting country has a
    nonmarket economy (“NME”) and where Commerce determines that the available information
    does not permit a standard normal value calculation, Commerce must determine normal value on
    the basis of surrogate values for “the factors of production utilized in producing the
    merchandise” plus “an amount for general expenses and profit plus the cost of containers,
    coverings, and other expenses.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1)(B).1 The surrogate value of the factors
    of production “shall be based on the best available information regarding the values of such
    factors in a market economy country or countries considered to be appropriate by [Commerce].”
    Id.
    Hebei does not contest the designation of India as the surrogate economy, but argues that
    Commerce failed to use the best available information from the Indian surrogate data in its
    normal value calculations. Because the statute provides little guidance as to what constitutes the
    “best available information” (“BAI”), Commerce is accorded “wide discretion in the valuation of
    factors of production in the application of those guidelines.” Nation Ford Chem. Co. v. United
    States, 
    166 F.3d 1373
    , 1377 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (citing Lasko Metal Prods., Inc. v. United States, 43
    1
    The factors of production utililized in producing the merchandise include, but are not
    limited to, labor hours, raw materials, energy and other utilities, and representative capital cost,
    including depreciation. 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(3).
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 
    10 F.3d 1442
    , 1446 (Fed. Cir. 1994)) (internal citations omitted). Thus, “Commerce need not prove
    that its methodology was the only way or even the best way to calculate surrogate values for
    factors of production as long as it was reasonable." Shandong Huarong Gen. Corp. v. United
    States, 
    159 F. Supp. 2d 714
    , 721 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2001).
    Despite the broad latitude afforded Commerce, its discretion is not unlimited, but must be
    exercised “in a manner consistent with underlying objective of [the statute]—to obtain the most
    accurate dumping margins possible.” Shandong Huarong, 
    159 F. Supp. 2d at 719
    ; see also
    Shakeproof Assembly Components, Div. of Ill. Tool Works, Inc. v. United States, 
    268 F.3d 1376
    , 1382 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“In determining the valuation of the factors of production, the
    critical question is whether the methodology used by Commerce is based on the best available
    information and establishes antidumping margins as accurately as possible.”). To achieve the
    statutory purpose of accuracy, Commerce’s choice of what constitutes BAI must evidence a
    rational and reasonable relationship to the factor of production it represents. See Shandong
    Huarong, 
    159 F. Supp. 2d at 719
    . In the context of products from the PRC, the requirement of
    BAI entails use of “the price that results in the most accurate calculation of what the cost of
    production would be in the PRC if the PRC were a market-economy country.” Rhodia v. United
    States, 
    185 F. Supp. 2d 1343
    , 1353 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2001) (“Rhodia I”); see also Baoding Yude
    Chem. Indus. Co. v. United States, 
    170 F. Supp. 2d 1335
    , 1345 (Ct. Int'l Trade 2001). But see
    Tianjin Mach. Import & Export Corp. v. United States, 
    16 CIT 931
    , 938, 
    806 F. Supp. 1008
    ,
    1016 (1992).
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                 PAGE 11
    In pursuing the most accurate calculation, Commerce’s practice has been to prefer
    “surrogate price data which is: (1) an average non-export value; (2) representative of a range of
    prices within the POR if submitted by an interested party, or most contemporaneous with the
    POR; (3) product-specific; and (4) tax-exclusive.” Taiyuan Heavy Mach. Imp. & Exp. Corp. v.
    United States, 
    23 CIT 701
    , 706 (1999) (internal citations omitted).
    II.    COMMERCE ’S USE OF AN IMPORT PRICE FOR THE SURROGA TE COAL VALUE
    In calculating the surrogate value for coal, Commerce rejected the Indian domestic coal
    price from the TERI Energy Data Directory in favor of the Indian import values for an
    unspecified “others” basket category of coal products taken from the MSFTI. Decision Mem., at
    cmt. 4, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Commerce gave two reasons why it rejected the TERI data. First,
    Hebei “did not put any information on the record to indicate specifically that steam coal, which is
    suitable for use in boiler generating steam and most often used for electricity generation, was
    used in the production process.” Decision Mem., at cmt. 4, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Second, Hebei
    “did not demonstrate the ‘useful heat value’ (UHV) of the coal used in the production process.”
    
    Id.
     Instead of the TERI steam coal data, Commerce used import values for an “others” basket
    category of coal products taken from the MSFTI in making the Preliminary Determination and
    Final Determination. 
    Id.
     This “others” category corresponds to HTSUS category 2701.1909,
    which encompasses “other coal;” i.e., coal that is not anthracite, bituminous, or
    bituminous–metallurgical. See Preliminary FOP Valuation Mem., at 5, Def.’s App., Tab 12.
    Hebei alleges three flaws in Commerce’s use of the Indian import price for the surrogate
    coal value: (1) Commerce misread the term "non-coking steam coal" and erred in discarding the
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 12
    domestic coal data published in TERI Energy Data Directory & Yearbook; (2) Commerce failed
    to explain how Indian imported coal price represented the cost incurred by Indian fence post
    manufacturers; and (3) Commerce failed to follow its established practice of using the domestic
    coal price. Hebei Op. Br. at 5–10. While Hebei observes correctly that Commerce failed to base
    its decision on substantial evidence, Hebei’s Indian domestic data appears to be an inadequate
    alternative basis for a surrogate coal value.
    A.      The Inadequacy of Hebei’s Surrogate Coal Data
    Coal is used in the production of the subject fence posts to generate heat that aids in the
    drying of coating materials. Decision Mem., at cmt. 4, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2, at 11. Commerce,
    conceiving of steam coal as that which is used for steam and electricity generation, did not find
    record evidence to indicate that steam coal was used in the production process. 
    Id.
     According to
    Hebei, however, the meaning of "steam coal" is much broader, representing not a specific type of
    coal used to generate steam but rather all coal not used for metallurgical purposes. Pls.’ Op. Br.,
    at 5–7. In advancing this argument, Hebei relies primarily on an attachment to its opening brief
    to this court. See Pls.’ Op. Br. at 6.2 The Government correctly characterizes this as information
    outside the record that cannot form the basis for Commerce’s decision, see NEC Corp. v. United
    States, 
    151 F.3d 1361
    , 1373 (Fed. Cir. 1998), and the court declines to take judicial notice of the
    information contained therein. The Government, however, failed to address Hebei’s somewhat
    2
    The attachment contains a printout from the website glossary of the U.S. Department of
    Energy's Energy Information Agency (“EIA”), wherein the EIA defines “steam coal” as “all
    non-metallurgical coal” and “metallurgical coal” as “coking coal and pulverized coal consumed
    in making steel.” United States Energy Information Administration: Energy Glossary, available
    at http://www.eia.doe.gov/glossary/glossary_main_page.htm, Pls.’ Op. Br., Attach. 1.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                   PAGE 13
    more persuasive secondary argument: that the broad scope of the term “steam coal” is evident
    from Hebei’s submissions to the record. See Pls.’ Op. Br. at 6–7.
    In the main text of the Hebei First Surrogate Data Submission, the brief discussion of coal
    refers initially to “steam coal” and then to “non-coking steam coal”:
    Steam Coal should be valued using data from the Teri Energy Data Directory &
    Yearbook for 2000/2001. The value is derived from price for non-coking steam coal
    as of April 20, 2000. These steam coal prices are based on grades for non-coking
    coal that are determined by coals UHV (“Useful Heat Value”). the UHV is measured
    by a range of kcal/kg. The average values for non-coking steam coal are as follows:
    GRADE A (UHV over 6200 kcal/kg.)            1109.26 RS/MT
    GRADE B (UHV 5600–6200 kcal/kg.)            1017.89 RS/MT
    GRADE C (UHV 4940–5600 kcal/kg.)             870.42 RS/MT
    GRADE D (UHV 4200–4940 kcal/kg.)             742.95 RS/MT
    Source documents for these surrogate values have been provided in Exhibit 9.
    Hebei First Surrogate Data Submission at 6, Pls.’ App., Ex. 1. Exhibit 9 to the Hebei First
    Surrogate Data Submission provides pages from the TERI Energy Data Directory & Yearbook
    for 2000/20001. Table 1.15 of the TERI Energy Data Directory makes no reference to “steam
    coal” but does refer to “non-coking coal,” which it defines as “coals other than coking, semi-
    coking, or weakly coking coals.” 
    Id.
     at Ex. 9, p. 44 n.3, Pls.’ App., Ex. 1. Table 1.28 provides
    the selling prices of non-coking coal on April 20, 2000, with the prices broken down by
    producer, characteristics, grade, and classification. 
    Id.
     at Ex. 9, p. 52–54, Pls.’ App., Ex. 1. The
    table provides three classifications: “steam coal and rubble,” “slack coal and washery middlings,”
    and “run–of–mine coal.” The logical inference to be drawn from Table 1.28 is that steam coal is
    a type of non–coking coal, not that steam coal is synonymous with non-coking coal or
    comparable to non-metallurgical coal or a basket of “others” coal products. Indeed, nothing in
    Table 1.28 suggests that steam coal is a more appropriate surrogate data source than the other
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 14
    two categories of non-coking coal provided by the table. Without additional evidence, it is a
    matter of speculation whether steam coal is used in the production of the subject fence posts.
    Thus, Hebei failed to provide record evidence to show that its steam coal data pertained
    to a sufficiently broad category of coal. Hebei’s data is further flawed because it lacks
    contemporaneity with the POI. See Union Camp Corp. v. United States, 
    20 CIT 931
    , 939, 
    941 F. Supp. 108
    , 116 (1996) (noting that, where possible, Commerce will select a publicly available
    published value which is, among other things, “representative of a range of prices within the
    POI”).
    B.     The Lack of Substantial Evidence for Commerce’s Use of Indian Import
    Values
    The shortcomings of Hebei’s data do not, however, resolve the issue of whether
    Commerce properly selected Indian coal import values over Indian coal domestic values.3 This
    3
    Even where a party opposing Commerce’s position has submitted information that
    ultimately proves inadequate, Commerce is not relieved of the requirement that it support its
    antidumping duty calculation with substantial evidence. See 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B).
    Section § 1677m(d) of title 19 demonstrates that a flawed data submission does not automatically
    support the opposing position, as it provides for additional measures where a party submits
    deficient information: “[Commerce] shall promptly inform the person submitting the response of
    the nature of the deficiency and shall, to the extent practicable, provide that person with an
    opportunity to remedy or explain the deficiency in light of the time limits established for the
    completion of investigations or reviews under this title.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677m(d).
    Hebei provided surrogate coal value information, the flaws of which were only articulated
    upon the issuance of the Final Determination. At the conclusion of the investigation’s
    preliminary stage, Commerce stated only that it used the Indian Import Statistics to obtain a
    surrogate value for coal. Preliminary Determination, 67 Fed. Reg. at 72,145; Preliminary FOP
    Valuation Mem., at 5–6, Def.’s App., Tab 12. Hebei had little basis from which to understand
    how to remedy the deficiencies in its surrogate coal data before the conclusion of the
    investigation, as well as little reason to seek out information in addition to the TERI data. Thus,
    the emergence of deficiencies in Hebei’s TERI domestic data does not necessarily lead to the
    conclusion that Commerce’s MSFTI import data is the best available information.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 15
    decision must still be supported by substantial evidence showing that the use of Indian import
    values is consistent with Commerce’s duty to calculate normal value as accurately as possible on
    the basis of the best information available.
    “The decision on which price to use–domestic or import–should be based on which value
    will result in a more accurate normal value.” Rhodia I, 
    185 F. Supp. 2d at 1352
    . Commerce’s
    use of import prices has been upheld on several occasions. See Nation Ford, 
    166 F.3d at 1378
    ;
    Taiyuan Heavy Mach. Imp. & Exp. Corp., 23 CIT at 709–710. Unlike Rhodia I or Nation Ford,
    however, Commerce here did not explain why an Indian manufacturer would pay for imported
    coal. Commerce defended its use of the Indian Import Statistics only on the grounds that the data
    was contemporaneous and “free of taxes and duties.” Decision Mem., at cmt. 4, Pls.’ App., Ex.
    2.
    This justification compares unfavorably with what was required in Yantai Oriental Juice
    Co. v. United States, Slip Op. 02-56 at 34 (Ct. Int'l Trade June 18, 2002). In Yantai, the court
    concluded that Commerce's rejection of the Indian domestic coal price in favor of the Indian
    import coal price was not supported by substantial evidence because (1) there was no indication
    that the domestic Indian coal market was distorted, e.g. by a high tariff that inflated the domestic
    price; and (2) there was no indication that the use of imported coal values best approximated the
    cost encountered by Indian apple juice producers. Id. at 22-23. On remand, Commerce was
    ordered to either recalculate normal value using domestic coal data or provide an explanation of
    why the use of domestic coal data would not more accurately approximate the costs experience
    of Indian apple juice production. Id. at 24. In the instant case, Commerce similarly failed to
    identify a distortion in the Indian domestic coal market or explain how import coal values best
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                 PAGE 16
    approximate the cost incurred by Indian fence post production.
    Other cases have affirmed Commerce’s choice between import and domestic values
    where Commerce’s decision demonstrated a reasonable basis for the superior accuracy of one
    over the other. In Nation Ford, the Federal Circuit upheld Commerce's use of an import price for
    aniline because the records showed that India protected its domestic industry with a high import
    tariff, which inflated the domestic price. Nation Ford, 
    166 F.3d at 1375-78
     (Fed. Cir. 1999). The
    tariff, however, was not paid by Indian producers if they used the material to produce for export.
    
    Id. at 1376
    . Therefore, Commerce's use of the import price was justified upon findings that
    Indian producers who exported their product bought imported material instead of domestic
    material because it was less expensive. See id.; Rhodia I, 
    185 F. Supp. 2d at 1351-52
     (finding a
    similar rationale sufficient to support the use of import values for phenol). In Shangdong
    Huarong, Commerce found that one of the respondents imported coal, but no such finding was
    made in the instant case. 
    159 F. Supp. 2d at 722-24
    . The use of the Indian domestic price for
    aniline was sustained in Baoding Yude, where Commerce concluded that the reduction of the
    high tariff rate effectively removed the previous distortions in the domestic price and Indian
    manufacturer no longer depended on imported aniline. 
    170 F. Supp. 2d at 1342-44
    .
    Each of the above cases required Commerce to demonstrate that either the import value
    or the domestic value was more accurate than the other. Commerce’s observation in the instant
    case—that the Indian import coal value was free of taxes and duties—does not meet this standard
    because it does not address whether taxes and duties had a distortive effect on the Indian
    domestic coal market. Accordingly, Commerce’s selection of an Indian import value for coal
    was not based on substantial evidence. On remand, Commerce must either provide further
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 17
    explanation based on record evidence or conduct further investigations to determine whether
    Indian import or domestic data provides a value that more accurately reflects the coal
    consumption patterns of producers in the relevant industry.
    III.   COMMERCE ’S USE OF A HIGH-PRICE/LOW -VOLUME SWEDISH VALUE IN THE
    CALCULATION OF A SURROGA TE VALUE FOR STEEL PALLETS
    A.      Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
    According to the Government, the doctrine of exhaustion precludes judicial review of
    Commerce’s inclusion of a Swedish import value in the calculation of the surrogate value for
    steel pallets. Def.’s Br. at 26–29. As a general matter, “[t]he exhaustion doctrine requires a party
    to present its claims to the relevant administrative agency for the agency’s consideration before
    raising these claims to the Court.” Timken Co. v. United States, 
    201 F. Supp. 2d 1316
    , 1340 (Ct.
    Int’l Trade 2002). The doctrine furthers two main purposes: (1) allowing the administrative
    agency to perform the functions within its area of special competence; and (2) promoting judicial
    efficiency by affording the agency the opportunity to correct its mistakes so as to resolve the
    controversy without judicial intervention. See Parisi v. Davidson, 
    405 U.S. 34
    , 37 (1972);
    Sandvik Steel Co. v. United States, 
    164 F.3d 596
    , 600 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
    “There is, however, no absolute requirement of exhaustion in the Court of International
    Trade in non-classification cases.” China Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    306 F. Supp. 2d 1291
    ,
    1310 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2004) (quoting Consol. Bearings Co. v. United States, 25 CIT __, __, 
    166 F. Supp. 2d 580
    , 586 (2001) (citations omitted), rev’d on other grounds by 
    348 F.3d 997
     (Fed.
    Cir. 2003)). Congress has directed that “the Court of International Trade shall, where
    appropriate, require the exhaustion of administrative remedies.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2637
    (d). By its use
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 18
    of the phrase “where appropriate,” Congress granted “discretion to determine the circumstances
    under which it is appropriate to require the exhaustion of administrative remedies.” China Steel,
    
    306 F. Supp. 2d at 1310
    ; see also, Cemex, S.A. v. United States, 
    133 F.3d 897
    , 905 (Fed. Cir.
    1998).
    Employing this discretion, the court has recognized certain exceptions to the requirement
    of exhaustion. One exception applies where the respondent did not have the opportunity to raise
    the relevant issue at the administrative level. Philipp Bros., Inc. v. United States, 
    10 CIT 76
    ,
    83–84, 
    630 F. Supp. 1317
    , 1324 (1986); see also Al Tech Specialty Steel Corp. v. United States,
    
    11 CIT 372
     , 377, 
    661 F. Supp. 1206
    , 1210 (1987) (noting that, in determining whether a
    question is precluded from judicial review, “the Court will assess the practical ability of a party
    to have its arguments considered by the administrative body”). In Philipp Bros., the plaintiff was
    not afforded an opportunity to raise its objections at the administrative level because Commerce
    did not address the issue until the final determination. 10 CIT at 83–84, 
    630 F. Supp. at 1324
    .
    With regard to the methodology Commerce uses to resolve an issue, the exhaustion
    doctrine is inapplicable where a respondent did not have the opportunity to challenge the
    methodology because Commerce failed to articulate the methodology it would use until the final
    determination. See LTV Steel Co. v. United States, 
    21 CIT 838
    , 869, 
    985 F. Supp. 95
    , 120
    (1997); see also SKF USA, Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of Commerce, 
    15 CIT 152
    , 159 n.6, 
    762 F. Supp. 344
    , 350 n.6 (1991) (declining to apply the exhaustion doctrine where a respondent did not have
    a chance to contest Commerce’s recalculation of the foreign market value because the agency did
    not reveal the result of the recalculation until the final determination).
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                PAGE 19
    Application of the exhaustion doctrine is inappropriate here because (1) while the
    elimination of the Swedish value at the time of the Preliminary Determination would have
    reduced the average steel pallet price by 11%, the elimination of the Swedish value at the time of
    the Final Determination would have reduced the surrogate steel pallet price by 24%, a
    significantly greater figure;4 and (2) only with the Final Determination did Commerce offer a
    benchmark for aberrational values when it excluded a Indian domestic value for powder coating
    that was 43% lower than the Indian import value and 34% lower than the Indonesian import
    value. Decision Mem., at cmt. 4, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Thus the potentially significant aberrational
    nature of the Swedish steel tube value only became apparent upon the issuance of the Final
    Determination, after the conclusion of the administrative investigation.5 Application of the
    exhaustion doctrine here, while possible, would be overly technical and unfair to Hebei.
    Accordingly, review of this issue is appropriate.
    4
    In the Preliminary Determination, Commerce calculated the steel pallets value based on
    imports from 25 countries during the non–contemporaneous period of April 2001 through
    December 2001. Preliminary FOP Valuation Mem., Ex. U, Def.’s App., Tab 12. In the Final
    Determination, however, Commerce replaced this data with a set of new data based on imports
    from 21 countries during the period of October 2001 through March 2002. Factors of Production
    Valuation of the Final Determination (Dep’t Commerce April 18, 2003), Ex. L, P. R. Doc. 159 at
    49, Def.’s App., Tab 17. As a result, the Swedish price increased from 629 Rs/Kg to 706 Rs/Kg;
    and the overall average price increased from 70 Rs/Kg to 82 Rs/Kg. 
    Id.
    5
    Hebei challenged the inclusion of the Swedish value as a ministerial error, but this was
    rejected by Commerce. ITA Memo Re: Ministerial Error Allegations (May 12, 2003), at 4, P. R.
    Doc. 173, Pls.’ App., Ex. 5.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                 PAGE 20
    B.      Commerce’s Unreasonable Decision to Include the Swedish Import Value
    Commerce’s inclusion of the Swedish import value is an unreasonable departure from the
    agency’s approach to aberrational data. “Consistent with the statutory requirement to use the best
    available information, Commerce must evaluate all data in the record to determine their
    reliability.” Shanghai Foreign Trade Enters. Co. v. United States, No. 03–00218, Slip Op. 04–33
    at 22 (Ct. Int’l Trade April 9, 2004). Commerce’s general practice in this regard is “to value
    inputs using surrogate values derived from the import statistics of the surrogate country. Further,
    [Commerce] has excluded—where appropriate—aberrational data that appear to distort the
    overall value for a specific import category.” Issues and Decision Memorandum to Final
    Determinations of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Steel Wire Rope from India and People’s
    Republic of China, at cmt. 1, 
    66 Fed. Reg. 12,759
     (Dep’t Commerce Feb. 28, 2001) [hereinafter
    Steel Wire Rope from India and the PRC].
    1.     The Aberrational Nature of the Swedish Value, Based on Price Variation
    Alone
    In the Final Determination, Commerce obtained a surrogate value for steel pallets using
    the prices for Indian imports of steel tubes from 21 countries between October 2001 and March
    2002. See Factors of Production Valuation of the Final Determination (Dep’t Commerce April
    18, 2003), at Ex. L, P.R. Doc. 159 at 49, Def.’s App., Tab 17 [hereinafter Final FOP Valuation
    Mem.]. In this period, the total quantity of steel tubes imported was 5,253,028 Kg, and the total
    import value was 435,494,000 Rs. 
    Id.
     Ninety–seven percent of these steel tube imports
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                 PAGE 21
    originated in 15 countries, with prices ranging between 14 Rs/Kg and 105 Rs/Kg. Id.6 Notably,
    over 60% of the total import quantity concentrated in three countries: Germany (1,697,422 Kg,
    32% of total import quantity), Japan (926,149 Kg, 17.7%), and Argentina (583,347 Kg, 11%).
    
    Id.
     Their respective prices were Germany (52 Rs/Kg), Japan (69 Rs/Kg), and Argentina ( 49
    Rs/Kg). 
    Id.
     In contrast, only 168,424 Kg were imported from Sweden and at much higher unit
    price: 706 Rs/Kg. Id.7 The overall average import price for steel tubes in the Final
    Determination—including the Swedish value—was 82 Rs/Kg. 
    Id.
    Exclusion of the Swedish value reveals its aberrational nature: it would lower the overall
    average to 62 Rs/Kg. 
    Id.
     This large drop in the average price reflects the fact that the Swedish
    value is 1,134% higher than the average of import values from all other countries and,
    considering the relatively low volume of Swedish imports, had a singularly disproportionate
    impact on the overall average value. A 1,134% price variation appears aberrational on its face,
    and this variation is more striking when compared to a value for Indian domestic powder coating
    6
    The remaining countries are Nepal (14 Rs/Kg; 92,570 Kg), Belgium (20 Rs/Kg; 60,910
    Kg), Czech Republic (27 Rs/Kg; 98,080 Kg), UAE (34 Rs/Kg; 113,545 Kg), France (44 Rs/Kg;
    260,078 Kg), Argentina (49 Rs/Kg; 583,347 Kg), Germany (52 Rs/Kg; 1,697,422 Kg), Canada
    (60 Rs/Kg; 96,770 Kg), Japan (69 Rs/Kg; 926,149 Kg), Italy (85 Rs/Kg; 196,437 Kg), Spain (87
    Rs/Kg; 76,547 Kg), Netherlands (88 Rs/Kg; 57,512 Kg), United Kingdom (89 Rs/Kg; 377,934
    Kg), Singapore (101 Rs/Kg; 194,837 Kg), and the United States (105 Rs/Kg; 220,729 Kg). See
    Final FOP Valuation Mem., at Ex. L, Def.’s App., Tab 17 (the first number in the above
    parentheticals is the individual country’s unit price; the second number is the total import
    quantity from that country).
    7
    In addition to Sweden, imports from five countries were valued over 200 Rs/Kg:
    Switzerland (490 Rs/Kg), Denmark (453 Rs/Kg), Taiwan (250 Rs/Kg), Austria (233 Rs/Kg) and
    Brazil (200 Rs/Kg). Final FOP Valuation Mem., at Ex. L, Def.’s App., Tab 17. The import
    quantities from these countries were relatively small: Switzerland – 202 Kg, Denmark – 130 Kg,
    Taiwan – 100 Kg, Austria – 3190 Kg, Brazil – 20 Kg. 
    Id.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 22
    that Commerce treated as aberrational in this case. Commerce rejected this powder coating value
    on the ground that it was 43% lower than the Indian import price and 34% lower than the
    Indonesian import price. If such variations from the average price are a benchmark for
    aberrational values, the Swedish value is clearly aberrational.
    2.      The Aberrational Nature of the Swedish Value, Based on Price Variation
    and Low Import Volume
    If the high-price/low volume Swedish value is somehow not clearly aberrational under the
    general approach of discarding distortive values, any doubt is removed in light of Commerce’s
    more specific practice to “disregard small quantity import data when the per-unit value is
    substantially different from the per-unit values of larger quantity imports of that product from
    other countries.” Shakeproof Assembly, 23 CIT at 485, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 1359–60; see also
    Shanghai Foreign Trade Enters., Slip Op. at 26 n.5 (“At oral argument, [the Government’s]
    counsel mentioned one method of determining whether an Indian Import Statistics price is
    aberrational: when import statistics include imports from several countries, Commerce will
    compare the price from countries with small quantity imports against those with large quantity
    imports, and Commerce will discard small quantity import prices if they are aberrational.”); see
    also Issues and Decisions Memorandum to Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than
    Fair Value: Ferrovanadium from the People’s Republic of China, at cmt. 13, 
    67 Fed. Reg. 71,137
    (Dep’t Commerce Nov. 29, 2002) (excluding low-volume import values that were “substantially
    different” from the values of high-volume imports).
    While Commerce enjoys discretion to consider new arguments or facts, it “must either
    conform itself to its prior decisions or explain the reasons for its departure.” Citrosuco Paulista,
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                 PAGE 23
    S.A. v. United States, 
    12 CIT 1196
    , 1209, 
    704 F. Supp. 1075
    , 1088 (1988). In the instant case,
    Commerce failed to conform itself to its prior rational decisions. The price for Swedish steel
    tube imports, 1,134% greater than the average price from all other countries and representing a
    fraction of the quantity of total imports, increased the overall average value by 24%.
    3.      The Swedish Value Falls Far Beyond the Range of Variation for the Other
    Values
    The Government defends the inclusion of the Swedish values on the ground that it was a
    reasonable response to the variations among the range of Indian import prices. Def.’s Br. at
    30–31. Commerce refers to the prices of Switzerland (490 Rs/Kg), Denmark (453 Rs/Kg),
    Austria (233 Rs/Kg), Nepal (14 Rs/Kg), Belgium (20 Rs/Kg) and the Czech Republic (28 Rs/Kg)
    to show that the data fluctuated so greatly that the deviation of Swedish price should not be
    considered aberrational. 
    Id.
     Reference merely to these per kilogram prices fails, however, to
    acknowledge a critical dimension to the variations in the data: the low volume of the
    higher–priced imports.
    The data showed five countries in addition to Sweden with import prices at or above 200
    Rs/Kg: Switzerland (490 Rs/Kg), Denmark (453 Rs/Kg), Taiwan (250 Rs/Kg), Austria (233
    Rs/Kg), and Brazil (200 Rs/Kg). See Final FOP Valuation Mem., at Ex. L, Def.’s App., Tab 17.
    These prices are much closer to the aberrational end of the spectrum, given their relatively low
    import volumes—Switzerland (202 Kg), Denmark (130 Kg), Taiwan (100 Kg), Austria (3,190
    Kg), and Brazil (20 Kg)—and the significantly greater import volumes for the low-priced imports
    from Nepal (92,570 Kg), Belgium (60,910 Kg), and the Czech Republic (90,080 Kg). 
    Id.
    Commerce’s argument fails to provide a reasonable explanation why high-price/low-volume
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                    PAGE 24
    values should be included in this case, in deviation from Commerce’s past practice.8 The
    irrationality of this approach is particularly stark with regard to the Swedish data, and this is the
    only data Hebei seeks to exclude.
    Even if the volume of the imports is ignored, the Swedish value still appears aberrational.
    The Swedish value is 8.5 times higher than the average import value of 83.02 Rs/Kg. See Pls.’
    Reply Br. at 8 (citing Final FOP Valuation Mem., at Ex. L, Def.’s App., Tab 17). If the Swedish
    value is set aside, the remaining highest and lowest import values have a roughly equal variation
    from the average import value. 
    Id.
     Switzerland, the highest remaining value, is approximately
    5.9 times higher than the average, while Nepal, the lowest remaining value, is approximately 5.7
    times lower than the average. 
    Id.
     Thus, while some values do vary significantly from the
    average, only the Swedish value varies to a uniquely extreme degree.
    Commerce should have discarded the Swedish value in conformity with its established
    practice of excluding aberrational data that distort the overall value for a specific import
    category. See Steel Wire Rope from India and the PRC, 
    66 Fed. Reg. 12,759
     (Dep’t Commerce
    Feb. 28, 2001) (stating that it is Commerce’s general practice in NME cases to
    “exclude[]—where appropriate—aberrational data that appear to distort the overall value for a
    specific import category.). On remand, Commerce shall exclude the Swedish import value from
    its steel pallet surrogate value calculations.
    8
    If the high-cost/low-volume imports were removed from the record, the prices of all
    remaining countries would fluctuate between 14 Rs/Kg and 105 Rs/Kg. See Final FOP
    Valuation Mem., at Ex. L, Def.’s App., Tab 17. Moreover, more than 60% of the total import
    quantity concentrated in a price range between 49 Rs/Kg and 69 Rs/Kg. 
    Id.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                PAGE 25
    IV.    COMMERCE ’S CALCULATION O F SURROGA TE RATIOS
    Hebei alleges that Commerce erred in its surrogate ratio calculations by removing from
    the ratios’ denominators the surrogate raw material costs for internal consumption. Commerce
    uses surrogate ratios to implement the provision in 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1)(B) which requires
    that the normal value for products of NMEs include amounts for “general expenses and profit” in
    addition to the cost of the surrogate FOP values. The amounts for general expenses and profit
    are typically obtained by applying the following surrogate ratios to the surrogate FOP values:
    selling, general and administrative expenses (“SG&A”),9 factory (or manufacturing) overhead,10
    and profit. Shanghai Foreign Trade Enters., Slip Op. at 5. These three ratios derive from the
    financial statements of one or more surrogate companies that produce merchandise in the
    surrogate country that is identical or comparable to the subject merchandise. Id. The ratios are
    calculated and incorporated into the normal value calculation in the following manner:
    To calculate the SG&A ratio, the Commerce practice is to divide a surrogate
    company's SG&A costs by its total cost of manufacturing. For the manufacturing
    overhead ratio, Commerce typically divides total manufacturing overhead expenses
    by total direct manufacturing expenses. Finally, to determine a surrogate ratio for
    profit, Commerce divides the before-tax profit by the sum of direct expenses,
    manufacturing overhead and SG&A expenses. These ratios are converted to
    9
    SG&A reflects the general expenses related to the cost of manufacturing and includes
    labor, materials, factory overhead, and energy costs. Fuyao Glass Industry Group Co., Ltd. v.
    United States, No. 02–00282, Slip Op. 03–169, at 38 n.26 (Ct. Int’l Trade Dec. 18, 2003).
    10
    “As factory overhead is composed of many different elements, the cost for individual
    items may depend largely on the accounting method used by the particular factory.” Magnesium
    Corp. of Am. v. United States, 
    166 F.3d 1364
    , 1372 (Fed. Cir. 1999). “The value of factory
    overhead is calculated as a percentage of manufacturing costs. Commerce calculates a ratio of
    overhead to material, labor and energy inputs (“MLE”) for producers of comparable merchandise
    in the surrogate country, India, and then applies this ratio to the NME producer’s MLE.” Rhodia
    I, 
    185 F.Supp. 2d at 1346
    .
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                   PAGE 26
    percentages ("rates") and multiplied by the surrogate values assigned by Commerce
    for the direct expenses, manufacturing overhead and SG&A expenses.
    
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    A.      Surrogate Ratios and Internal Raw Material Consumption
    Because direct manufacturing expenses are a component in the denominator of each ratio,
    each ratio requires data for raw material costs. To this end, the Preliminary Determination
    utilized the “Raw Material Consumed” line-item from the “EXPENDITURES” column in the
    Surya Roshni P&L Statement for the year ended March 31, 2001. 
    Id.,
     Pls.’ App., Ex. 3.11 Below
    this line-item is an indented line-item, or contra account,12 that reads “Less: Internal
    Consumption,” followed by a line–item for raw material consumption net of internal
    11
    The Preliminary Determination explained the selection of Surya Roshni as the
    surrogate for purposes of ratio calculations:
    To value factory overhead, selling, general and administrative expenses (SG&A) and
    profit, we used the audited financial statements for the year ended March 31, 2001,
    from an Indian producer of circular welded steel pipe, Surya Roshni (Surya). See
    FOP Memo for the calculation of these ratios from Surya's financial statements. As
    noted above, section 773(c)(4) of the Act requires that the Department value the
    NME producer's factors of production, to the extent possible, based on the prices or
    costs of factors of production in one or more market economy countries that are
    significant producers of comparable merchandise. The Department was unable to
    locate publicly available financial statements for an Indian fence post producer, and
    therefore, we looked for a producer of comparable merchandise. The production of
    fence posts and circular welded steel pipe have similar production processes and
    material inputs, in that the production of these products use steel sheets or strips in
    coil form as the major input, and the respective products inceptively use the process
    of roll forming to create the desired shape of the steel.
    
    67 Fed. Reg. 72,141
    , 72,145 (citations omitted).
    12
    The court takes judicial notice that a contra account is one that is subtracted from some
    other account. See Robert N. Anthony & James S. Reece, Accounting Principles 87 (1995).
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                    PAGE 27
    consumption. 
    Id.
     The Preliminary Determination used the first, gross raw material consumption
    line–item, not the net raw material consumption line-item. Petitioner Steel City challenged this
    decision, arguing that the gross figure improperly included “materials that are internally
    consumed.” Pet.’s Case Br. at 8, Def.’s App., Tab 15. Steel City explained why such materials
    should not be included in the calculation of surrogate ratios:
    [the “Raw Material Consumed”] line item overstates the total cost of materials that
    are entering the overall production process at Surya Roshni, in the same manner that
    the line item “Sales” overstates the total sales volume by indicating internal transfers.
    Surya Roshni recognizes this issue, and provides in the financial statement both the
    net sales and the net materials consumed.
    The Department should recognize that the factory overhead expenses and SG&A
    expenses are incurred as the result of the consolidated production process. As such,
    including materials internally consumed double-counts the value of internal transfers
    in the denominator, thereby understating the resulting percentage. The value of these
    internal transfers is shown both on the revenue side (Rs. 730,575,211) and on the cost
    side (Rs. 717,871,564) of the financial statement, so that the aggregate profit
    balances properly. In the Department’s calculation, the value of the internal transfers
    is included as part of the cost, without recognizing that these generate an offsetting
    income line item.
    To correct this error, the Department should either define the direct materials cost as
    the net cost (Rs. 3,879,219,666), or should reduce the total materials cost used in the
    current calculation by the revenue generated from the internal transfers (Rs.
    730,575,211).
    Pet.’s Case Br. at 8, Def.’s App., Tab 15 (emphasis added). Nowhere in its briefing does Steel
    City provide authority to support its assertion as to the source of overhead and SG&A expenses
    or to the effect of including internal consumption. Commerce agreed with Steel City and
    reversed its position in the Final Determination. This entailed a recalculation of “SG&A and
    [factory overhead] surrogate ratios using Surya Roshni’s raw material cost, netting out internal
    transfers.” Decision Mem., at cmt. 8, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                   PAGE 28
    Hebei challenges the removal of the internal consumption figure on the grounds that (1) it
    is based merely on the unwarranted assumption that material expense for internal consumption
    represents a material cost for the production of internal assets rather than a material cost for the
    production of goods; (2) there is insufficient evidence to support the conclusion that the inclusion
    of internal consumption would result in inaccurate ratio calculations; (3) if internal consumption
    is removed from the raw material costs in the denominator of the ratios, it should also be
    removed from the numerator; and (4) it conflicts with the prior practice of Commerce. Pls.’ Op.
    Br. at 11. The Government, in turn, argues that, because Hebei cites no record evidence to
    support its contentions, the Final Determination’s recalculation should be upheld as a reasonable
    decision using the best available information. See Def.’s Br. at 32.
    “Because [19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1)] is ambiguous, we review Commerce’s interpretation
    to determine whether it is reasonable.” Rhodia, Inc. v. United States, 
    240 F. Supp. 2d 1247
    ,
    1252 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2002) (“Rhodia II”); see also Fuyao Glass Indus. Group Co., Ltd. v. United
    States, No. 02–00282, Slip Op. 03–169, at p. 33 (Ct. Int’l Trade Dec. 18, 2003). In evaluating
    the reasonableness of Commerce’s calculation methodology, the court remains mindful that
    Commerce’s general mandate is to calculate normal value as accurately as possible on the basis
    of the best available information available. This mandate allows Commerce to draw reasonable
    inferences from the record, Yantai, Slip Op. at 5 (quoting Daewoo Elecs. Ltd. v. United States, 
    6 F.3d 1511
    , 1520 (Fed. Cir. 1993)), but it is not a license to guess. China Nat’l Arts and Crafts
    Imp. and Exp. Corp. v. United States, 
    15 CIT 417
    , 424, 
    771 F. Supp. 407
    , 413 (1991)
    (“Guesswork is no substitute for substantial evidence in justifying decisions”).
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                      PAGE 29
    B.      The Ambiguous Meaning of “Internal Consumption”
    To evaluate whether Commerce improperly removed internal consumption from Surya
    Roshni’s raw material costs, the meaning of internal consumption must first be examined.
    Commerce defined the internal consumption line-item as representing “materials consumed
    outside of the normal production process of the goods sold by a company.” Decision Mem., at
    15, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Commerce went on to assume that, within that broad definition, raw
    materials could be internally consumed in two ways: (1) through production of internal assets;
    i.e., such that internal consumption “represents the use of raw materials to produce internal assets
    rather than finished products for sale;” and (2) through intra-facility transfers; i.e., “if the
    material costs were increased to include internal transfers between factories or cost centers.” 
    Id.
    Commerce’s rationale for removing internal consumption differs according to the source of the
    internal consumption.
    If internal consumption reflects the production of internal assets, then the figure should be
    removed because “[o]nly those materials consumed in the production of finished goods should be
    included in the cost of goods sold.” 
    Id.
     If internal consumption reflects intra-facility transfers,
    Commerce believes that failure to remove the figure would result in “double-counting material
    costs in the denominator of the financial ratios,” 
    id.,
     though it did not explain how this
    double–counting would occur. Unfortunately, there is no direct record evidence for these
    interpretations aside from the line items in the Surya Roshni P&L Statement.
    The Surya Roshni P&L Statement does not indicate how much, if any, of the internal
    consumption figure is attributable to either type of transaction. Schedule 13 of Surya Roshni’s
    financial statements defines the raw material internal consumption contra account as “internal
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                  PAGE 30
    consumption of components.” Final FOP Valuation Mem., at Ex. P, Def.’s App., Doc. 17. The
    addition of “of components” does little to clarify whether such components were used to produce
    internal assets or were merely transferred among Surya Roshni’s business units.
    More helpful is an examination of both the sales and expenditure sections of the Surya
    Roshni P&L Statement, which provides a “Less: Internal Consumption” contra line item for both
    “expenditure - raw materials consumed” (Rs. 717,871,564) and “income - sales” (Rs.
    730,575,211). The fact that internal consumption is listed as a contra line item suggests that, at
    least in some sense, Surya Roshni’s raw materials expenditures and sales income are more
    accurately reflected if internal consumption is removed. A gap exists, however, between this
    reasonable inference and the two explanations offered by Commerce to justify the removal of
    internal consumption from raw material costs.
    Nothing in the Surya Roshni P&L Statement—or anywhere else—supports Commerce’s
    first explanation; that raw materials were used to produce internal assets. On the other hand, the
    rough equivalence between the internal consumption figures for sales and expenditures lends
    some credence to Commerce’s second explanation; that the internal consumption figures
    represent transfers between units of the consolidated Surya Roshni organization. Such an
    inference fails to explain, however, the discrepancy between the consumption and sales figures.
    Furthermore, the speculative nature of the intra–facility transfer interpretation is suggested by the
    language of the Final Determination: “if the material costs were increased to include internal
    transfers between factories or cost centers, only the net material cost figure would avoid double-
    counting material costs in the denominator of the financial ratios.” Decision Mem., at cmt. 8,
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                    PAGE 31
    Pls.’ App., Ex. 2 (emphasis added).13
    Surprisingly, the internal-transfer interpretation is somewhat similar to that provided by
    Hebei: “the most reasonable conclusion is that internal consumption represents goods produced
    that were then sold as intra–company sales.” Pls.’ Op. Br. at 13. The difference is that, by
    characterizing the internal transfers as “intra-company sales,” Hebei asserts that Surya Roshni
    incurred the same costs and expenses as would be incurred from arms–length external sales. 
    Id.
    (“Regardless of whether product is sold to an unrelated customer or sold in an intra-company
    transfer, the costs and expenses associated with the product remain the same.”). Hebei not only
    fails to provide record evidence for this claim but also fails to consider the possibility that some
    or all of the internal transfers may be little more than artificial transactions recorded for
    accounting purposes.
    Commerce is allowed to make reasonable inferences, but it does not cite any record
    evidence that makes the interpretation of the internal consumption figure more than a speculative
    enterprise. See Kerr-McGee Chem. Corp. v. United States, 
    21 CIT 1353
    , 1361, 
    985 F. Supp. 1166
    , 1173 (1997) (“For purposes of judicial review, the evidence before this Court is limited to
    the evidence contained in the administrative record.” (citations omitted)). As shown above, the
    parties have invoked contradictory—yet supposedly elementary—accounting principles without
    13
    The Government claims that Commerce’s approach is consistent with its past practice.
    As evidence of past practice, the Government cites only Notice of Preliminary Determination of
    Sales at Not Less Than Fair Value and Postponement of Final Determination: Structural Steel
    Beams from Spain, 
    66 Fed. Reg. 67
    , 207, 67, 209 (Dec. 28, 2001). In this preliminary
    determination, Commerce excluded from the home market sales database sales between the mills
    of a company because these sales were made for internal consumption. 
    Id.
     Because this decision
    does not pertain to the calculation of surrogate ratios, it is inapposite.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                   PAGE 32
    providing citations. Even if the court were to find that raw material internal consumption
    represents mainly intra–company transfers, further review of this issue finds only additional
    unfounded propositions.
    C.      Commerce’s Unsupported Explanation for Removing Internal Consumption
    If internal raw material consumption resulted from intra-company transfers, Commerce
    explained that such data should be excluded because “only the net material cost figure would
    avoid double-counting material costs in the denominator of the financial ratios.” Decision Mem.,
    at cmt. 8, Pls.’ App., Ex. 2. Unfortunately, Commerce did not elaborate as to what constitutes
    double-counting or the precise manner in which double-counting would distort the surrogate
    ratios. Perhaps double-counting occurs where, for example, one unit of a consolidated entity
    purchases $1,000 of raw materials from an external source and later transfers those raw materials
    to another unit inside the consolidated entity. If the raw material expenditure account of the
    consolidated entity reflects a $1,000 expenditure for the external transaction and a $1,000
    expenditure for the internal transaction, then the account gives a misleading impression as to how
    much the consolidated entity is really spending on raw materials. That is, the consolidated entity
    only paid $1,000 for the raw materials, but the account shows $2,000 worth of expenditures for
    those materials. Such a conception of double-counting is not, as Hebei claims, “an extremely
    bizarre assumption,” Pls.’ Reply Br. at 13, yet it finds no affirmative support in the record. It
    remains speculative and is not “render[ed] evident” by Commerce’s use of the phrase “double-
    counting” in the Decision Memorandum. See China Nat’l Machinery Imp. & Exp. Corp., 264 F.
    Supp. 2d at 1242 (quoting H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 103–826(I) at 98, reprinted in 1995
    U.S.C.C.A.N. 3773).
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                PAGE 33
    Assuming internal consumption represents intra-company transfers, and assuming as well
    the validity of the above example, then Commerce expressed a valid concern that the inclusion of
    internal consumption would overvalue raw material costs in the surrogate ratios. These
    assumptions, however, reflect the dearth of record evidence on this issue. If that were not reason
    enough to reject Commerce’s approach, Commerce also failed to follow the intra-facility transfer
    rationale in a consistent manner.
    D.      Commerce’s Failure to Consider the Effects of Internal Consumption on
    SG&A and Factory Overhead Expenses
    While Commerce’s decision purports to purge the surrogate ratios of the distortive effects
    of internal consumption, Commerce failed to complete this task. Internal consumption was
    removed only from Surya Roshni’s raw material costs in the denominator of the surrogate ratios.
    Commerce did not consider the possibility that internal transfers also generate SG&A and factory
    overhead expenses that would be reflected in the numerator of the SG&A and factory overhead
    ratios, a possibility raised by Commerce’s own hypothetical conception of Surya Roshni as a
    consolidated business entity conducting significant internal transfers. Administrative and judicial
    precedents underscore the importance of addressing the possibility that internal transfers generate
    SG&A and factory overhead expenses, but the problem in this case is that there is absolutely no
    basis for determining what amount of these expenses is attributable to internal consumption. As
    a result, any attempt to remove internal consumption from the numerator of the ratios would
    involve the same guesswork as the adjustment to the denominator.
    In the Issues and Decision Memorandum to the 2000–2001Administrative Review of
    Stainless Steel Sheet and Strip in Coils from Mexico, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 6,889
     (Dep’t Commerce Feb.
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                    PAGE 34
    11, 2003), Commerce had the benefit of financial statements that separated sales to “Parent and
    affiliates” from sales to “Third parties,” which supported directly the intra-facility transfer
    rationale for excluding internal transfers. 68 Fed. Reg. at 6,891. On the basis of this information
    and a citation to the Financial Accounting Standard Board’s statement of a relevant accounting
    principle, Commerce agreed with petitioners that a subsidiary’s sales of raw materials to its
    parent should be removed from the denominator of the ratio for indirect selling expenses because
    “[the subsidiary’s] sales of raw materials to its parent can be construed as an intracompany
    transfer of merchandise, as they involve only a routine transfer of merchandise.” 68 Fed. Reg. at
    6,891. Commerce then addressed the likelihood that some indirect expenses were generated by
    affiliated transfers: “while we deem it inappropriate to assign an equal amount of indirect selling
    expenses to the affiliated transfers of raw materials as compared to sales of finished merchandise,
    we do consider it appropriate to attribute some expenses to these transfers. Thus, we also have
    reduced the numerator of the indirect selling expense ratio by an amount attributable to the
    expenses incurred by [the subsidiary] in selling these raw materials to [the parent].” Id. In the
    instant case, however, the Surya Roshni financial information does not appear to provide any
    basis for calculating the amount of internal raw material costs attributable to SG&A and factory
    overhead.
    A similar lack of evidence confronted the parties in Fuyao Glass Indus. Group, Slip Op.
    at 40. In that case, the court identified the need to exclude from the numerator “any amount of
    selling and administrative costs related to [traded goods]” if traded goods were excluded from the
    denominator. Id. The court also noted the evidentiary problem: “both Commerce and Fuyao
    acknowledge that there is insufficient evidence to determine where expenses associated with the
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                 PAGE 35
    purchase of traded goods are accounted for in St. Gobain’s financial statement.” The court
    responded with the following solution: “On remand, Commerce shall correct the calculation of
    the SG&A ratio by either (1) eliminating expenses relating to the purchase of traded goods from
    the numerator, (2) including costs relating to the purchase of traded goods in the denominator, or
    (3) developing some other reasonable method for taking traded goods into account.” Id. Such an
    approach is instructive for the instant case.
    As shown above, Commerce’s exclusion of internal raw material consumption is
    predicated on a series of conjectures, and “[c]onjectures are not facts and cannot constitute
    substantial evidence.” China Nat’l Mach. Imp. & Exp. Corp., 264 F. Supp. 2d at 1240 (citing
    China Nat’l Arts and Crafts Imp. and Exp. Corp., 15 CIT at 424, 
    771 F. Supp. at 413
    ). Despite
    the challenges inherent in constructing normal value for a product from a NME country,
    Commerce’s method for recalculating the surrogate ratios “falls outside the limits of permissible
    approximation.” See Sigma Corp. v. United States, 
    117 F.3d 1401
    , 1407–08 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
    Accordingly, this issue is remanded for further explanation and, if necessary, further
    investigation. See China Nat’l Mach. Imp. & Exp. Corp., 264 F. Supp. 2d at 1243 (remanding
    the case to Commerce “to review and augment the administrative record and to explain its
    determinations adequately”). If Commerce is able to explain adequately the rationale for
    removing internal raw material consumption from the denominator of the surrogate ratios, then
    Commerce shall: (1) determine to what extent, if any, SG&A and factory overhead expenses are
    attributable to internal raw material consumption; and (2) remove appropriate amounts from the
    numerators of the SG&A and factory overhead surrogate ratios. If Commerce is unable to obtain
    sufficient evidence for this task, Commerce shall: (a) include internal raw material consumption
    COURT NO . 03–00442                                                                PAGE 36
    in the denominator of the SG&A, factory overhead, and profit surrogate ratios; or (b) provide a
    rational explanation why more accurate surrogate ratios result from the removal of internal raw
    material consumption from the ratios’ denominators only.
    CONCLUSION
    Commerce lacked substantial evidence for its surrogate coal value and surrogate ratio
    calculations. Commerce’s decision to include the aberrational Swedish value in its surrogate
    steel pallet calculation was unreasonable and, therefore, not in accordance with the law.
    Accordingly, Hebei’s motion for judgment on the agency record is granted in part. The case is
    remanded for reconsideration and action consistent with this opinion.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    /s/ Jane A. Restani
    Jane A. Restani
    Chief Judge
    Dated: This 19th day of July, 2004.
    New York, New York
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Court 03-00442

Citation Numbers: 2004 CIT 88, 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 1185

Judges: Restani

Filed Date: 7/19/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

Authorities (24)

Sandvik Steel Company v. United States, Fujitsu Ten ... , 164 F.3d 596 ( 1998 )

Consolidated Bearings Company, Plaintiff-Cross v. United ... , 348 F.3d 997 ( 2003 )

Nec Corporation and Hnsx Supercomputers, Inc. v. United ... , 151 F.3d 1361 ( 1998 )

Nation Ford Chemical Company v. United States, and Yude ... , 166 F.3d 1373 ( 1999 )

cemex-sa-v-the-united-states-and-the-ad-hoc-committee-of-az-nm-tx-fl , 133 F.3d 897 ( 1998 )

magnesium-corporation-of-america-the-international-union-of-operating , 166 F.3d 1364 ( 1999 )

Philipp Bros., Inc. v. United States , 10 Ct. Int'l Trade 76 ( 1986 )

Baoding Yude Chemical Industry Co. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 1118 ( 2001 )

Rhodia, Inc. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 1278 ( 2001 )

SKF USA, Inc. v. United States Department of Commerce , 15 Ct. Int'l Trade 152 ( 1991 )

China Steel Corp. v. United States , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 38 ( 2004 )

sigma-corporation-city-pipe-and-foundry-inc-long-beach-iron-works-and , 117 F.3d 1401 ( 1997 )

daewoo-electronics-co-ltd-and-daewoo-electronics-corp-of-america-inc , 6 F.3d 1511 ( 1993 )

Shakeproof Assembly Components, Division of Illinois Tool ... , 268 F.3d 1376 ( 2001 )

Citrosuco Paulista, SA v. United States , 12 Ct. Int'l Trade 1196 ( 1988 )

Timken Co. v. United States , 26 Ct. Int'l Trade 434 ( 2002 )

Rhodia, Inc. v. United States , 26 Ct. Int'l Trade 1107 ( 2002 )

Consolidated Bearings Co. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 546 ( 2001 )

Shandong Huarong General Corp. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 834 ( 2001 )

Al Tech Specialty Steel Corp. v. United States , 11 Ct. Int'l Trade 372 ( 1987 )

View All Authorities »