Catfish Farmers of Am. v. United States , 2013 CIT 63 ( 2013 )


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  •                                           Slip Op. 13 - 63
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    :
    CATFISH FARMERS OF AMERICA, et al.,       :
    :
    Plaintiffs,            :
    :
    v.                        : Before: R. Kenton Musgrave, Senior Judge
    :
    UNITED STATES,                            : Court No. 11-00109
    :
    Defendant,             :
    :
    and                        :
    :
    VINH HOAN CORPORATION, VINH               :
    QUANG FISHERIES CORPORATION,              :
    H&N INTERNATIONAL, and VIETNAM            :
    ASSOCIATION OF SEAFOOD EXPORTERS          :
    AND PRODUCERS,                            :
    :
    Defendant-Intervenors. :
    :
    OPINION AND ORDER
    [Remanding sixth antidumping administrative review for reconsideration of certain aspects.]
    Dated: May 23, 2013
    Valerie A. Slater, Jarrod M. Goldfeder, Natalya D. Dobrowolsky, and Nicole M. D’Avanzo,
    Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, LLP, of Washington DC, for the plaintiffs.
    Ryan Majerus, Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department
    of Justice, of Washington DC, argued for the defendant. On the brief were Stuart F. Delery, Acting
    Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, Franklin E. White, Jr., Assistant Director,
    and Courtney S. McNamara, Attorney. Of Counsel was David W. Richardson, Office of the Chief
    Counsel for Import Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.
    Matthew J. McConkey, Dave M. Wharwood, and Jeffrey C. Lowe, Mayer Brown LLP, of
    Washington DC, for defendant-intervenor Vinh Hoan Corporation.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                         Page 2
    Robert G. Gosselink and Jonathan M. Freed, Trade Pacific, PLLC, of Washington DC, for
    defendant-intervenors Vinh Quang Fisheries Corporation and H&N Foods International.
    Mark E. Pardo, Andrew Thomas Schutz, and Jeffrey O. Frank, Grunfeld Desiderio Lebowitz
    Silverman & Klestadt, LLP, of Washington DC, for defendant-intervenor Vietnam Association of
    Seafood Exporters and Producers.
    Musgrave, Senior Judge:      This action contests the final results of the sixth
    administrative review of the antidumping duty order on three species of Pangasius fish1 conducted
    by the International Trade Administration of the United States Department of Commerce
    (“Commerce” or “Department”). See Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of
    Vietnam: Final Results of the Sixth Antidumping Duty Administrative Review and Sixth New Shipper
    Review, 
    76 Fed. Reg. 15941
     (Mar. 22, 2011), PDoc 246 (“Final Results” or “Sixth Review”) and the
    issues and decision memorandum (“I&D Memo”) accompanying those results, PDoc 242. The
    review period is August 1, 2008 through July 31, 2009.
    The plaintiffs, domestic industry petitioners,2 move for judgment on the
    administrative record. In opposition, the defendant-intervenors argue the Final Results should be
    1
    The antidumping duty order covers Pangasius hypophthalmus (also identified as Pangasius
    pangasius), Pangasius bocourti, and Pangasius micronemus. See Notice of Antidumping Duty
    Order: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 47909
    (Aug. 12, 2003) (“Order”).
    2
    Plaintiffs are Catfish Farmers of America and individual U.S. domestic catfish processors
    America’s Catch, Consolidated Catfish Companies, LLC d/b/a Country Select Fish, Delta Pride
    Catfish Inc., Harvest Select Catfish Inc., Heartland Catfish Company, Pride of the Pond, and
    Simmons Farm Raised Catfish, Inc. The Final Results cover, inter alia, the mandatory respondent
    Vinh Hoan Corporation (“VC”), voluntary respondent Vinh Quang Fisheries Corporation, as well
    as the separate rate respondents An Giang Fisheries Import and Export Joint Stock Company
    (Agifish), East Sea Seafoods Limited Liability Company (ESS LCC), and Southern Fishery
    Industries Company, Ltd. (South Vina).
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                             Page 3
    sustained as is on matters affecting them. The defendant argues for remand of some of the issues
    and for sustaining the results in all other respects. The matter is accordingly remanded, as follows.
    Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    Jurisdiction is proper pursuant to 19 U.S.C. §1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) and 
    28 U.S.C. §1581
    (c). Commerce’s antidumping duty determinations are to be upheld unless “unsupported by
    substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”              19 U.S.C.
    §1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).
    Discussion
    The margin of dumping of subject merchandise is determined by comparing its export
    price or constructed export price with its “normal value” (“NV”), a calculation usually based upon
    home market or third-country sales, depending upon market viability. See 
    19 U.S.C. §1675
    (a)(2).
    For a producer or exporter subject to a non-market economy (“NME”) such as Vietnam, the statute
    directs that NV shall be based on factors of production calculated by reference to an appropriate
    surrogate market-economy country or countries. See 19 U.S.C. §1677b(c)(1); see, e.g., Shakeproof
    Assembly Components, Div. of Illinois Tool Works, Inc. v. United States, 
    268 F.3d 1376
    , 1381 (Fed.
    Cir. 2001). Commerce is required to use the “best available information” in the selection of
    surrogate data, and the surrogate country should be, to the extent possible, (1) at a level of economic
    development comparable to the non-market economy country and (2) a significant producer of
    comparable merchandise. 19 U.S.C. §l677b(c)(1)&(4).
    The plaintiffs’ claims mainly concern aspects of Commerce’s surrogate valuation
    (“SV”) methodology. That system normally relies on publicly available information and values all
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 4
    factors of production in, or from, a single surrogate country. See 
    19 C.F.R. §351.408
    (c). First
    addressed below are matters on which voluntary remand is requested.
    I. Voluntary Remand for Reconsideration of Certain
    Financial Data Included in Surrogate Financial Ratios
    Commerce requests remand in order to reconsider including in its surrogate financial
    ratio calculations for the Final Results certain financial data for Gemini Sea Food, a Bangladeshi
    company, as Commerce had omitted to address the plaintiffs’ argument that evidence in the record
    indicates Gemini received a potentially countervailable government subsidy, and such a circumstance
    is proper for remand. See SKF USA, Inc. v. United States, 
    254 F.3d 1022
    , 1029 (Fed. Cir. 2001).
    The matter will be therefore be remanded (for reconsidering inclusion of Gemini’s financial data).
    II. Voluntary Remand for Reconsideration
    of Surrogate Value for Fish Waste
    In the Final Results, Commerce selected surrogate values for fish waste based upon
    Philippine import statistics for Harmonized Tariff Schedule (“HTS”) category 0304.90 (other fish
    meat of marine fish) maintained in the World Trade Atlas (“WTA”), and it rejected price quotes on
    the record the plaintiffs had obtained from Vitarich Corporation, a Philippine fish and seafood
    processor, consisting of an April 7, 2010 price list with per kilogram pickup prices of Pangasius fish
    waste (and trimmings, and fish skins) in Philippine pesos. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 30-32.
    The plaintiffs contend these price quotes were accompanied by a supporting affidavit providing in
    substance the same information as that which accompanied two other price quotes, also of record,
    from Indian seafood processing companies, that Commerce had previously relied upon in prior
    proceedings, which reliance was upheld in Vinh Quang Fisheries Corp. v. United States, 33 CIT __,
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                                Page 5
    
    637 F. Supp. 2d 1352
     (2009). The plaintiffs contend: that it was unreasonable for Commerce to
    reject the Vitarich price quotes on the basis that they contained “no official company stamp” without
    explaining why this was relevant or the relevance of the quotes’ provision on Vitarich company
    letterhead documentation, that Commerce did not elaborate its concerns over public availability or
    address that the quote had been obtained upon the request of a member of the public as stated in the
    affidavit, and that Commerce did not adequately explain why a price quote that slightly post-dated
    the POR precluded its use when Commerce has “frequently” relied on non-contemporaneous data
    in other antidumping cases. Pls’ Br. at 32-36, referencing, inter alia, Jinan Yipin Corp. v. United
    States, 35 CIT ___, 
    800 F. Supp. 2d 1226
    , 1292 n.76 (2011) (“The ultimate question to be
    determined is: Do the price data accurately reflect prices throughout the period of review (whether
    or not those data are ‘contemporaneous’ and ‘representative,’ as Commerce defines those terms)?”);
    Sichuan Changhong Elec. Co. v. United States, 
    30 CIT 1481
    , 1504, 
    460 F. Supp. 2d 1338
    , 1359
    (2006) (“Because the selected information appears to be more accurate, it cannot be said that
    Commerce was unreasonable in choosing it over a more contemporaneous, but less accurate
    alternative.”); see also Petitioners’ SV Submission (Apr. 8, 2010), PDoc 96, at Ex. 16.3
    3
    The price quote was accompanied by the affidavit of a Philippine lawyer explaining that
    she was retained to obtain this price data. PDoc 96 at Ex. 16. The affidavit further explained the
    prices are on an ex-factory and tax-exclusive base. 
    Id.
     Along with this information, the attorney also
    identified from whom she obtained the price quote at Vitarich and included a copy of the Vitarich
    employee’s business card. 
    Id.
     Commerce emphasized the facts that the quote “contains no official
    company stamp, was obtained outside the context of an actual business transaction, lists no terms
    of payment, does not list the person who provided the price, and was obtained after the POR,” Sixth
    Review I&D Memo at 28, and it also expressed “concerns as to whether this price quote is truly
    publicly available, to the extent that anyone from the public could duplicate it,” 
    id.,
     but the plaintiffs
    point out that Commerce did not address the fact that the affidavit identified the delivery terms and
    the party offering the price and explained precisely the manner in which the price quote was
    obtained. See PDoc 96 at Ex. 16.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 6
    The plaintiffs argue Commerce’s rejection of the Vitarich quote (as well as the two
    Indian price quotes) is contrary to Commerce’s previous position and not adequately explained.
    Without admitting error, Commerce requests remand in order to reconsider its surrogate fish waste
    valuation. The matter will be remanded therefor, but upon remand Commerce will also address the
    plaintiffs’ concerns as articulated in their briefs. If on remand Commerce continues to be inclined
    toward reliance upon HTS data, it will clearly explain why neither the Vitarich price quote nor the
    previously-relied-upon Indian price quotes for fish waste were not the best available information to
    value fish waste as compared with the HTS data. See, e.g., PDoc 96 at Ex. 24; Petitioners’ Case
    Brief (Jan. 7, 2011), PDoc 222, CDoc 61, at 25 & n.74.
    III. Surrogate Values for Broken Meat, and Fish Skins
    In the Final Results, Commerce also had to select surrogate values for broken fish
    meat and fish skin. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 32-33. To value respondents’ broken meat by-
    product, Commerce used import price statistics from the WTA for Philippine HTS category 0304.90,
    (other meat of marine fish). To value the fish skin by-product, Commerce selected WTA import
    price statistics for Bangladesh HTS category 2301.20 (flours, meals, and pellets, of fish or of
    crustaceans). Sixth Review I&D Memo, at 32-33. The plaintiffs here repeat that it was erroneous
    to rely upon such broad “basket” import statistics without considering the relative importance of
    product specificity in the process of surrogate valuation of the broken meat and fish skin by-products
    after they pointed out that HTS 0304.90 is a basket HTS category that by definition encompasses
    many types of meat from many species of fish and includes import data from countries that have no
    known production of Pangasius, PDoc 222 at 25 & n.75, and also that HTS 2301.20 includes a
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                             Page 7
    variety of fish and crustacean products and does not accurately reflect the value of the respondents’
    fish skin input, Petitioners’ Rebuttal Brief (Jan. 18, 2010), PDoc 227, at 193. Rather, the plaintiffs
    contend, the price quote they obtained from Vitarich, supra, is reliable and “highly product-specific”
    to Pangasius “trimmings” and “skin.” Pls’ Br. at 36, referencing PDoc 96 at Ex. 16.
    In determining what constitutes “best available information,” Commerce must
    evaluate record evidence according to its surrogate value selection criteria. Commerce recognized
    that the Vitarich price quote “may be more specific,” but in “considering the other criteria”
    Commerce found the Philippines import data superior because the “Vitarich price quote is not
    contemporaneous, does not represent a broad market average, and is not publicly available.” Sixth
    Review I&D Memo at 29. Commerce therefore determined not to use that price quote for purposes
    of valuing the broken meat and fish skin. The defendant asks that this determination be sustained,
    but because Commerce’s reasoning here appears intertwined with its rejection of the Vitarich price
    quote in the context of valuing the fish waste, it is appropriate that Commerce reconsider the broken
    meat and fish skin valuations from a clean slate, alongside its reconsideration of the proper valuation
    of fish waste, supra.
    IV. Surrogate Country Selection
    The plaintiffs’ main challenge is to Commerce’s consideration of the data leading to
    its selection of Bangladesh as the primary market surrogate. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 7-14.
    A. Background
    The selection of a surrogate country involves four steps. See Import Administration
    Policy Bulletin 04.1 (Mar. 1, 2004) (Non-Market Economy Surrogate Country Selection Process),
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 8
    Commerce will (1) compile a list of countries that are at a level of economic development
    comparable to the country being investigated, (2) ascertain which of those countries produce
    comparable merchandise, (3) determine which of those are significant producers of comparable
    merchandise, and (4) if the selection process retains more than one country at this point, determine
    which country has the “best factors data” based upon the data’s quality (i.e., their reliability,
    accessability and public availability).    See id. at 3.    Commerce generally chooses for the
    administrative proceeding the most appropriate surrogate country by reviewing these criteria, but on
    occasion economic comparability cannot be determined until after the significant producer
    requirement is met. See id. The plaintiffs do not complain of the general adherence to this process
    during the administrative review at bar.
    During the Sixth Review, Commerce was faced with having to determine whether the
    record with respect to the Philippines or Bangladesh contained the best available information for
    valuing factors of production. At the preliminary stage, as it had in prior reviews, Commerce
    determined that whole live fish accounted for the largest percentage of subject merchandise NV and
    were therefore its most significant input. Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic
    of Vietnam: Notice of Preliminary Results . . . of the Sixth Antidumping Duty Administrative Review
    and Sixth New Shipper Review, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 56062
    , 56066 (Sep. 15, 2010) (“Preliminary Results”)
    (concluding that the primary consideration must be “the availability and reliability of the surrogate
    values for whole live fish on the record”), PDoc 164. This is uncontested.
    At this point, it is appropriate to summarize Commerce’s surrogate selection process
    during the prior administrative review. See Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 9
    of Vietnam, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 12726
     (Mar. 17, 2010) (inter alia final review results) (“Fifth Review”) and
    accompanying I&D Memo.4 In that precedent Fifth Review, the plaintiffs argued for valuing the
    factors of production based on data they had submitted from the “Fish Pond Report” maintained by
    the Philippine Department of Agriculture, Bureau Agriculture of Statistics (“BAS”) for the country’s
    pangas fish production, as supported by the affidavit of an official of BAS. The respondents argued
    in favor of using the “FAO Report data” from United Nations Food and Agriculture Report:
    Economics of Aquaculture Feeding Practices in Selected Asian Countries for Bangladesh.
    Commerce considered both contentions. Regarding the Fish Pond Report, although
    the supporting affidavit from the BAS official attested that the data in the report were finalized,
    Commerce voiced “concern with the quality and reliability of the chart and the data contained within
    it” due to the presence of “#DIV/0!” symbols in some of the data fields, the fact that it bore a
    handwritten title, and the fact that the affiant “affirms” that the data had yet to be finalized.
    Commerce found that the data had “yet to be presented in its normal publication” and thus found the
    data not yet publicly available, therefore not reliable, and therefore not the best available information
    with which to value the main input (fish). See Fifth Review I&D Memo at 8-10. Regarding the FAO
    Report, Commerce found that although it was not contemporaneous with the POR, it satisfied the
    other surrogate value selection criteria as to public availability, specificity to the input, and tax and
    duty exclusivity. Therefore, “taken as a whole,” Commerce concluded the FAO Report remained
    the best information available to value the main input. Id. at 10.
    For the review now at bar, the plaintiffs again submitted the Philippines Fish Pond
    Report data. See PDoc 96 at Ex. 5-A and Ex. B-9; see also Petitioners’ Rebuttal Factor Value Data
    4
    Available at http://ia.ita.doc.gov/frn/summary/VIETNAM/2010-5853-1.pdf
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                          Page 10
    (Apr. 29, 2010 ), PDoc 110, and Petitioners’ SV Submission (July 9, 2010), PDoc 132, at Att. 1. The
    submission passed preliminary muster in relevant part, and Commerce was again faced with the
    choice of either the Philippines or Bangladesh as surrogate after certain other data and possible
    surrogates had been rejected. See Preliminary Results, 75 Fed. Reg. at 56066-67. This time,
    Commerce found each sets of data from their respective countries to be publicly available, tax and
    duty free, representative of broad market averages, and indicative of country-wide Pangasius
    production. See id. at 56067.
    The preliminary determination notes that the Bangladesh FAO Report data specified
    coverage of “Pangasianodon hypothalmus”5 whereas the Philippines data identified the broader
    genus Pangasius, but Commerce concluded (and the parties do not appear to contest) there was
    nothing in the record from which to “determine that any difference between the two sources would
    necessarily generate a difference in price.” Id. Commerce also looked at the contemporaneity of the
    data sets and found the Philippine data contemporaneous with the period of review because they
    were from 2008, whereas the Bangladesh FAO Report data were from 2005. Id. Largely on this
    distinction, Commerce selected the Philippines as the primary surrogate country for the preliminary
    Sixth Review results. Id. at 56066-67. This selection resulted, ceteris paribus, in antidumping duty
    rates of $4.22 per kg for Vinh Hoan, $2.44 per kg for Vinh Quang, and $0.93 per kg for CL-Fish.
    The rate for Vinh Hoan was also assigned to the separate rate respondents Agifish, ESS LCC, and
    South Vina. See generally id. at 56065-69.
    The parties thereafter submitted second and final surrogate country data. E.g., PDocs
    194-197, 199, 215, and rebuttal commentary thereon, e.g., PDocs 210-212, 236. The plaintiffs’
    5
    I.e., Pangasius hypothalamus. Cf. note 1.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                           Page 11
    submission provided updated Philippine BAS data showing approximately 34 tons of Pangasius
    produced in 2009 in addition to approximately 12 tons produced in 2008. Petitioners’ Factor Data,
    PDoc 196, at Ex. 1 (Table 51) (“FS 07-09”). The Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and
    Producers (“VASEP”), as an interested party before Commerce, also provided updating data that
    purportedly covered weekly wholesale prices gathered via “structured collection” methodology from
    all 70 regions of Bangladesh during the POR. These data consisted of spreadsheets VASEP had
    obtained from the Bangladesh Ministry of Agriculture’s Department of Agricultural Marketing. See
    VASEP’s SV Submission (Nov. 12, 2010), PDoc 195, at Ex. 7 (“DAM 08/09 data”).
    In their administrative case and rebuttal briefs, the plaintiffs asserted that their
    Philippine FS 07-09 data were relevant and representative of farm-gate prices for whole live
    Pangasius, and they argued: that Commerce should not rely on either the Bangladesh FAO Report
    data or the DAM 08/09 data, that the spreadsheets therefor refer only to “pangas” prices and not the
    specific species covered by the Order, that the DAM 08/09 data were not part of an official
    published government report and should be rejected for the same reasons Commerce had rejected
    the plaintiffs’ submission of Philippine BAS data during the Fifth Review, that the DAM 08/09 data
    spreadsheets also contained the same missing-data symbols (i.e., “#DIV/0!”) that had informed
    Commerce’s rejection of the BAS data in the Fifth Review, that the DAM 08/09 data were wholesale
    and not farm-gate prices and therefore at a different level in the chain of distribution, that even
    though the DAM data were supposedly collected based upon interviews with farmers there is no
    quantity associated with the prices, and that the data were generally unreliable based on an affidavit
    obtained from a Bangladeshi lawyer who had interviewed DAM officials responsible for their
    collection. See generally PDoc 227 at 39-150. That affidavit asserts that DAM officials purport to
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                             Page 12
    collect estimates of price averages from interviews with businessmen and customers but do not
    attempt to validate the data, and that the affiant was not provided, despite request, with a copy of the
    questionnaire used to collect the data. See id. at 56.
    For the Final Results Commerce changed its preliminary determination and decided
    that the primary surrogate country should be Bangladesh on the basis of the DAM 08/09 data.
    Regarding the argument that the DAM 08/09 data should be rejected upon the same rationale
    Commerce had employed to reject the Fish Pond Report in the Fifth Review (to wit, that the DAM
    08/09 data set is not an official, published government source and cannot be considered publicly
    available), Commerce disagreed “that the attributes of the DAM 08/09 data are so similar to those
    of the Fish Pond Report” that they would warrant rejection as a viable source to value the whole fish.
    After acknowledging that the Fish Pond Report’s lack of publication had been cause for concern in
    the Fifth Review, Commerce explained that this was “rooted in the fact that Petitioners claimed the
    data were to be published” or “source data to be used in a yet-to-be determined manner for official
    publication in the Fisheries Situationer,” i.e., the data may not have been finalized or were in draft
    form prior to publication. In contrast, Commerce noted the DAM 08/09 data were accompanied by
    a letter from a deputy director of the agency in the Bangladesh Ministry of Agriculture in charge of
    “collecting and disseminating the wholesale market price of various agricultural commodities,
    livestock, and fisheries, including Pangas.”6 Sixth Review I&D Memo at 12, quoting PDoc 195 at
    Ex. 7. The official in that letter declares that the DAM 08/09 “data can be provided to any member
    6
    In the process, Commerce minimized the affidavit that had accompanied the Fish Pond
    Report as not an “official statement from the Government of the Philippines, but rather solely a
    personal affidavit by the statistician in charge of compiling the data.” In this Sixth Review,
    Commerce does not directly fault the affidavit of this same person, averring in her (also apparently
    same) capacity as the “incumbent Chief of the Fisheries Statistics Division (“FSD”)” of BAS.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 13
    of the public upon request, free of cost” and that the price data contained within is “country-wide
    data” representing “all months of years 2008 and 2009, covering all districts of Bangladesh.” Due
    to this “official certif[ication] as to the nature and breadth of the DAM 08/09 data, the completeness
    of the data, and the availability of the data to the public upon request,” Commerce concluded that
    “the DAM 08/09 data does [sic] not appear to be incomplete or not finalized” and thus found that
    they constitute publicly available information.
    After rejecting the domestic petitioners’ argument that the use of “pangas” among the
    DAM 08/09 data spreadsheets is non-specific to the Order and therefore renders them unuseable,
    Commerce turned to address their argument that the spreadsheets contain the same “#DIV/0!”
    symbols that were a large cause for rejection of the Fish Pond Report data in the Fifth Review. In
    this instance, having found, a priori, the data implicitly finalized, Commerce reasoned
    there is a clear distinction in this case, as the term appears in the DAM 08/09 data
    when there is no data for any given district of any given week for that month. In
    other words, if there were no Pangas pricing data available from [a particular] district
    for any of the weeks in a month, the monthly average column will show the term
    “#DIV/0!.” In fact, in every instance where the term “#DIV/0!” appears there is no
    weekly price data for that district, thereby causing the monthly average column to
    generate the formulaic term “#DIV/0!.” Therefore, it is reasonable to conclude that
    this term is generated simply as a function of the mathematical formula trying to
    perform a calculation on cells with no data in them. As such, we do not find the
    appearance of this term of any significance such that it would question the DAM
    data’s quality or reliability as Petitioners have argued.
    Sixth Review I&D Memo at 11.
    Commerce then addressed the domestic petitioners’ argument that the DAM 08/09
    data are not be the best available information with which to value the whole fish input because those
    data are wholesale prices, not farm-gate level prices, and may thus include delivery costs, taxes and
    duties, and/or mark ups for wholesaler’s profit. Commerce stated it is “unclear whether the DAM
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 14
    08/09 data wholesale prices necessarily include other costs[.]” Commerce then declared that the
    prices in FS 07-09 “do not contain only farm[-]gate prices” based upon its “plain reading” of the
    affidavit of the aforementioned chief7 of FSD, to wit, that the prices “quoted by the aqua farm
    farmers/operators (or other Respondents, as the case may be)” are “farm-gate or first-point-of-sale”
    prices. Commerce noted that the domestic petitioners at the public hearing “attempted to explain
    that what was meant . . . with respect to ‘first point of sale’ prices was a reference to the place of
    sale, not the format of the sale” but Commerce found “no record evidence to further clarify or
    corroborate” the domestic petitioners’ explanation. Rather, Commerce found that the statements in
    the affidavit “suggest[ ] that the prices in the FS 07-09 include prices other than strictly farm-gate,
    i.e., prices for different channels of distribution.” Commerce therefore found “the issue of whether
    the DAM 08/09 data or whether the FS 07-09 data represents solely farm[-]gate prices sheds little,
    if any, light in our analysis because both sources can be considered equally to contain information
    which suggests the prices are not solely farm-gate prices.”
    Lastly, Commerce addressed the domestic petitioners’ argument that the DAM 08/09
    data are not better than the prices in the FS 07-09 because they do not contain information as to the
    quantities sold, and therefore it cannot be determined whether the prices are based on commercial
    sales volumes of whole Pangasius or based on estimates or isolated spot prices. Commerce pointed
    to the DAM official’s affidavit, wherein is stated that “all the price information therein are in
    Bangladeshi Taka on a per Quintal basis, i.e., per 100 kg”, that the price data was “collected using
    a scientific method” and a “structured questionnaire”, involving interaction “with a network of all
    leading aqua farmers and wholesale traders as well as through direct market enquiry by visiting
    7
    Commerce repeatedly deflates to “statistician”. E.g., Sixth Review I&D Memo at 11.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 15
    mandi (marketplace)”, that the weekly data are collected and forwarded to DAM, and that the
    monthly average price is based on such weekly price data points. Commerce characterized the
    domestic petitioners as “ultimately concerned with the overall reliability of the DAM 08/09 data due
    to the absence of volumes sold” and then it found that the DAM official’s explanation on the data
    collection methods in part “addresses any concerns with respect to reliability.” Commerce further
    explained that although it prefers to rely on data that contain volume and value information,
    we have also used sources for major inputs in other cases that do not contain specific
    volume or value data used to generate the prices. For example, in two recent
    antidumping duty investigations where wire rod is the main input used to produce the
    subject merchandise (steel wire garment hangers and steel nails), the Department
    relied on a source that did not contain volume data.[ ] Both of these cases cited to
    others involving similar fact patterns, e.g., one relied on a publication the Department
    uses in cases involving chemical inputs and another involved frozen shrimp where
    the SV for the main input, raw shrimp, is derived from a source without quantity
    data.[ ] In other words, all other factors being equal, we found these data sources to
    be the best available information with which to value the major inputs, even in the
    absence of volume information.
    Id. at 12 (footnote omitted). Thus Commerce found these “facts” rendered the absence of volumes
    with respect to the DAM 08/09 data “of lesser concern.” In the end, Commerce found
    that both sources are publicly available, from a potential surrogate country,
    contemporaneous with the POR, broad market averages, are equally specific to the
    main input. Simultaneously, both can be considered equally to contain information
    which suggests the prices are not solely farm-gate prices. Given this degree of
    equivalence with respect to these factors, we examined the information upon which
    the Bangladeshi and Philippine potential surrogate whole live fish values were based,
    concluding that the Bangladeshi data represent a fuller set of data more appropriate
    for use as an SV. Therefore, as a result of the totality of the information considered
    above, we conclude that the DAM 08/09 data represent the best available data on the
    record with which to value the whole live fish input. Given the significance of the
    whole live fish input in the calculation of NV, we therefore conclude that the choice
    of Bangladesh offers more reliable SV information and thus select Bangladesh as the
    primary surrogate country for purposes of these final results.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                                 Page 16
    Id. at 13-14. This decision resulted in antidumping duty rates of $0.00 for Vinh Hoan, Vinh Quang,
    and CL-Fish, and $0.02 per kilogram for Agifish, ESS LCC and South Vina. 76 Fed. Reg. at 15944.
    B. Analysis
    The plaintiffs argue the defendant and defendant-intervenors have failed to
    demonstrate the legal viability of the DAM 08/09 data as the “best available information” because
    the determination was based on conclusions or assumptions contradicted by substantial record
    evidence and because Commerce did not, contrary to its stated policy and practice, consider the
    totality of available data for the full range of reported factors of production in its analysis.
    1. Commerce’s Preference For “Farm-Gate” Over Wholesale Prices
    Attention drawn in the Sixth Review to distinguishing between farm-gate and
    wholesale prices reflects the relative importance of level of trade in the administrative analysis.
    Commerce’s previously-stated preference is for farm-gate prices. See, e.g., Fifth Review I&D Memo,
    supra, at 15 (stating that farm-gate prices are preferable to downstream “market” prices because
    market prices may reflect additional other expenses). The Sixth Review record shows that the
    respondents purchased their whole fish directly from fish farms at farm-gate prices. See, e.g., Vinh
    Hoan’s Section D response (Jan. 6, 2010), PDoc 70, at 5-6; QVD’s Section A Response (Dec. 8,
    2009), PDoc 53, at 20. The defendant argues (or admits) that this “record does not support a clear
    analytical distinction between farm gate and wholesale prices” but that “[b]oth are prices which a
    producer of fish fillets could pay for the whole live fish input.” Def’s Resp at 21 n.3. The
    contention veers into post hoc rationalization, given that Commerce stated as follows:
    it is uncertain the extent to which prices clearly identified as being farm-gate prices
    or wholesale prices are relevant in the surrogate valuation analysis most importantly
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 17
    because surrogate valuation seeks to determine the price a respondent would pay for
    an input if it were to be producing in the surrogate country, not necessarily what
    producers of that input in the surrogate country receive.
    Sixth Review I&D Memo at 11 & n.37.
    This does not adequately address deviating from Commerce’s previously-expressed
    preference, ceteris paribus, for farm-gate prices. In the Fifth Review, for example, Commerce found
    farm-gate prices quite relevant when “determin[ing] the price a respondent would pay for an input
    if it were to be producing in the surrogate country[.]” In that review, Commerce rejected data
    pertaining to the “Pangas Thesis” precisely because it is “unclear whether [its] methodology relies
    on farm gate prices or market prices, and if market prices, what movement or other expenses are
    included in those prices.” Fifth Review I&D Memo at 15 (italics added). Deviation from practice
    may be upheld if the agency’s reasons therefor are valid, Allegheny Ludlum Corp. v. United States,
    
    346 F.3d 1368
    , 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2003), but Commerce’s determination does not adequately explain
    why the distinction between farm-gate pricing and wholesale pricing is now irrelevant to determining
    the price a respondent would pay for an input if it were producing in the surrogate country.
    2. Contradictory Record Evidence
    a. Commerce’s Finding That The Philippines’ Data and Bangladeshi
    Price Data “Equally” Contain “Not Solely Farm-Gate Prices”
    Commerce concluded “the issue of whether the DAM 08/09 data or whether the FS
    07-09 data represent[ ] solely farm[-]gate prices sheds little, if any, light in our analysis because both
    sources can be considered equally to contain information which suggests the prices are not solely
    farm-gate prices.” Sixth Review I&D Memo at 11. This muddles the record. The defendant
    contends “Commerce meant that the DAM data are not farm-gate prices and [that] the BAS data
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                                Page 18
    contain some prices other than farm-gate prices.” Def’s Br. at 23. That is also post hoc
    rationalization. If it accurately portrays what Commerce meant, Commerce should have so stated.
    Even then, the explanation is artificial, as the uncontested record shows that the Bangladesh DAM
    08/09 data solely reflect wholesale-level prices, which circumstance does not “suggest” the inclusion
    (or rather straw-man disinclusion) of farm-gate prices whatsoever. Commerce’s articulation thus
    disingenuously put the data sets on “equal” footing and detracted from the analysis.
    b. Commerce’s Interpretation of the Philippines Price Data
    The conclusion that the Philippine FS 07-09 data “contain information which suggests
    that the prices are not solely farm-gate prices” depended upon interpreting the two affidavits
    pertaining to the FS 07-09 data. Considering the affidavit from the chief of the Philippines’ BAS’s
    Fisheries Statistics Division (“FSD”), Commerce found nothing of record to corroborate the
    petitioners’ interpretation of it and stated that a “plain reading . . . suggests that the prices in the FS
    07-09 include prices other than strictly farm-gate, i.e., prices for different channels of distribution.”
    Sixth Review I&D Memo at 11. The affidavit is indeed plain, but it leads to the opposite conclusion.
    Relevant statements therein are as follows:
    . . . Respondents must be aquafarm farmers, operators or caretakers. Other
    possible respondents are aquafarm traders and persons knowledgeable in the
    production of aquaculture in the locality.
    ***
    . . . Among the information included in the data collection and gathering are
    the price/value of the product per kilogram, volume of production in metric ton[,] and
    harvest area in terms of hectarage. The prices quoted by aquafarrm farmers/operators
    (or other respondents, as the case may be) are also referred to as first-point-of-sale-
    price or farm-gate price.
    . . . The price stated in the Fisheries Statistics of the Philippines and in the
    Fisheries Situationer is referred to as the farm-gate price or the price quoted by the
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                             Page 19
    aquafarm farmers/operators at their first point of sale. The price stated is also tax
    exclusive.
    ***
    . . . The volume and value data for Pangasius in the attached schedule,
    entitled “Freshwater Fishpond, 2008,” is the complete and final compiled information
    collected for pangasius produced in the in the Philippines for the year 2008. This
    report forms part of the Bureau’s working papers and contains the statistical data
    used to prepare the official Fisheries Statistics of the Philippines and the Fisheries
    Situationer publications. . . .
    . . . The Freshwater Fishpond, 2008 Report includes the quantity, value and
    weighted-average unit price data for whole live Pangasius produced and sold in the
    Philippines in 2008. . . .
    PDoc 132 at Att. 1, ¶¶ 9, 13-14, 18-19 (italics added).
    Taking into account whatever in the record supports the agency’s finding as well as
    fairly detracts, it cannot be concluded that interpreting this affidavit as referring to two different
    “channels of distribution” and implicit selling price points was reasonable. Contrary to the finding
    of no information of record to support the plaintiffs’ interpretation, the BAS information of record
    provides that agency’s clear definition of “farm-gate prices”: they are equivalent to “first point of
    sale” prices, to wit, “prices received by farmers and livestock raisers for the sale of their produce at
    the first point of sale, net of freight costs.” See Petitioners’ SV Submission (Dec. 13, 2010), PDoc
    210, at Ex. 8 (italics added). That describes not “two different channels of distribution” but the same
    price point -- for production -- that does not include the cost of a different (or further) channel of
    distribution. “The” price stated in the Fisheries Statistics of the Philippines and in the Fisheries
    Situationer is thus plain, and the “or” employed in the above affidavit is conjunctive, not disjunctive.
    To imply or conclude that “the” price stated therein and published is one of commingled, different
    price points from different channels of distribution is to ignore, unreasonably, BAS’s stated
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                             Page 20
    statistical focus on “the” price of live, whole fish. Substantial record evidence thus does not support
    the contrary administrative interpretation of this affidavit.8
    A second affidavit of record influenced the agency’s opinion that “there is some
    evidence that the data for one of the Philippine Regions may include a small volume of further
    processed whole live fish which is meaningful to the analysis because prices of cleaned and cut fish
    are substantially higher than those for whole fish.” This affidavit was procured from an official of
    the Philippines Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (“BFAR”), which is wholly separate and
    distinct from the BAS that prepares and publishes the Fisheries Statistics that would include the FS
    07-09, who attests that he was the project leader of Pangasius development in “Region 2” and that
    BFAR Region 2 demonstration farms produced 3200 kilograms of [Pangasius] fish
    in 2008 and 2009. This production was included in official government surveys and
    is accounted for in the Fisheries Statistics of the Philippines, 2007-2009.
    Pangasius prices in BFAR Region 2 were significantly higher than those in other
    parts of the Philippines in 2008 and 2009. The prices were higher because the region
    is land-locked and is otherwise isolated from sources of marine[ ] and brackish water
    fish, making fish relatively scarce and thus more expensive than other parts of the
    Philippines.
    8
    BAS had also defined “traders” as “those who buy and sell goods or commodities” and
    “wholesalers” as “those who buy in bulk from farmers/raisers/fishermen and fellow traders.” The
    only reasonable interpretation of “aquafarm trader” in the affidavit is for obtaining his or her
    knowledge of “production of aquaculture in the locality” (including “price/value of the product per
    kilogram, volume of production, in metric ton and harvest area in terms of hectarage”) and quotation
    of first-point-of-sale price, i.e., the farm-gate price. Even construing, arguendo, “other respondent”
    in the affidavit to encompass a fellow-trader “wholesaler,” it is still plain that for purposes of FSD’s
    statistical information gathering any “prices quoted by” such wholesaler would still have to be first-
    point-of-sale prices (i.e., the farm-gate price) based upon such wholesaler’s knowledge of what he
    or she paid or would have paid to purchase product from an aquafarm farmer. That would be the
    only meaningful construction, because a price “quoted by” a wholesaler for a sale from that
    wholesaler, as defined by BAS, to another purchaser would not be a “first-point-of-sale” price, as
    defined by BAS.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                          Page 21
    Some 10-15 percent of Pangasius fish harvested in Region 2 in 2008 and 2009 were
    sold cleaned, cut or otherwise not live or in whole form. Prices of the cleaned cut
    fish are substantially higher than those for whole fish.
    VASEP Second SV Rebuttal Submission, PDoc 211, at Att. I,¶¶ 2-6.
    The plaintiffs admit the possibility that some Pangasius were sold in further
    processed forms in Region 2, but they argued to Commerce that the BFAR official did not claim he
    had knowledge of the data collection procedures of BAS or indicate that the prices included in the
    FS 07-09 data reflected any sales of cleaned, cut, or non-whole Pangasius for Region 2, as he stated
    only that “production” is accounted for in BAS’s publication. The plaintiffs here contend Commerce
    simply connected two disparate statements and speculated that BAS included among the
    “substantially higher” prices of the Pangasius sold in Region 2 those that were “sold cleaned, cut
    or otherwise not in live or whole form” into its price reports.
    “Substantial evidence” is “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept
    as adequate to support a conclusion.” Consolidated Edison Co. of New York v. NLRB, 
    305 U.S. 197
    ,
    229 (1938). Commerce concluded BAS included the prices of sales of “cleaned, cut or otherwise
    not in live or whole form” Pangasius from BFAR Region 2 into its price reports, since it noted that
    the inclusion of such (obviously dead) fish “may explain” the “observation of price volatility in the
    FS 07-09 data for Region 2.” Sixth Review I&D Memo at 13. That conclusion runs counter to the
    BFAR official’s expressed reason for why prices for Pangasius for BFAR Region 2 as a whole were
    “significantly higher” as well as BAS’s focus on the production and price of whole, live fish.
    The court is very much aware that Commerce’s mandate requires it to assess often
    conflicting or unclear evidence, that judicial review refrains from re-weighing the evidence leading
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                             Page 22
    to an administrative determination, e.g., Matsushita Elec. Indus. Corp. v. United States, 
    750 F.2d 927
    , 936 (Fed. Cir. 1984), and that “the possibility of drawing two inconsistent conclusions from the
    evidence does not prevent an administrative agency’s finding from being supported by substantial
    evidence,” Consolo v. Federal Maritime Comm’n, 
    383 U.S. 607
    , 620 (1966) (citation omitted) (see,
    e.g., American Silicon Technologies v. United States, 
    261 F.3d 1371
    , 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2001), but
    speculation does not amount to reasonable inference, as it provides no factually-grounded basis for
    sustaining an agency’s determination. See, e.g., Fifth Review I&D Memo at 9 (wherein Commerce
    reasoned it would not be appropriate to “draw conclusions about the range of prices” from the
    Philippines Fish Pond Report “given the nature of the pool of respondents and the location and time
    period of the data collected”). While it is unclear from the record whether the BFAR official’s and
    FSD’s official’s statements are even inconsistent, it is, however, clear that Commerce’s conclusion
    impugns the stated focus of BAS’s statistical reports in addition to the veracity of the FSD official’s
    statements. If that was intentional, the issue, of whether the price-volatility finding is mere
    speculation or reasonable inference, fortunately need not be addressed at this time, because remand
    of the surrogate country determination as a whole is otherwise required. See infra.
    On remand, the “observed price differential” for Region 2 may also need proper
    context. In addition to the foregoing, Commerce noted that the Philippines whole fish prices in 2008
    ranged from 77.14 to 128.82 Php/kg, i.e., by 67%, and it also noted that “similar volatility is not seen
    in the Bangladeshi data[.]” Sixth Review I&D Memo at 13. The plaintiffs point out that this latter
    observation is inaccurate, as the DAM worksheets show price variations that are even wider among
    different Bangladeshi districts than those of the Philippine BAS data: for example, in January 2008,
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 23
    the monthly average prices for “pangas--small” ranged from 2938 to 7100 Tk/quintal, i.e., a range
    of 142%. See PDoc 195 at Ex. 7. If Commerce again reaches the issue of price volatility on remand,
    it should reasonably address the plaintiffs’ concerns regarding such directly contradictory evidence.
    See, e.g., Huvis Corp. v. United States, 
    570 F.3d 1347
    , 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2009). The court here again
    emphasizes it is not substituting judgment for that of Commerce on these issues, it is merely
    observing;9 Commerce’s expressed preference for farm-gate prices may give way to a reasonable
    determination that they are not the “best” data for purposes of surrogate country selection if it
    provides a reasonable explanation for the choice, but thus far that explanation is lacking.
    c. Commerce’s Interpretation of Bangladeshi Price Data
    After determining that the issue of whether the DAM 08/09 data or the FS 07-09 data
    represent “solely” farm-gate prices “sheds little . . . light . . . because both sources can be considered
    equally to contain information which suggests the prices are not solely farm-gate prices[,]”
    Commerce then concluded the price data reflected in the Bangladeshi DAM 08/09 data, reflecting
    a per-100 kilogram basis, represent “a fuller set” than the Philippines data and are reliable because
    they were “collected using a scientific method”. This determination requires reconsideration and a
    fuller explanation.
    9
    The plaintiffs also ask the court to take judicial notice of the fact that in the seventh
    administrative review Commerce rejected the worksheets as not publicly available, see Certain
    Frozen Fish Fillets From the Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Final Results and Partial Rescission
    of the Seventh Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 
    77 Fed. Reg. 15039
     (Mar. 12, 2012) and
    accompanying I&D Memo. A court may do so (e.g., Borlem S.A.-Empreedimentos Industrais v.
    United States, 
    913 F.2d 933
    , 940 (Fed. Cir. 1990)), and the plaintiffs have also submitted a “notice
    of supplemental authority” concerning the eighth administrative review covering the 2010-2011
    period, see 
    78 Fed. Reg. 17350
     (Mar. 21, 2013), but there is no need to refer to those determinations
    at this point.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 24
    The plaintiffs had argued, as described above, that the DAM 08/09 data do not
    indicate specific quantities associated with the prices indicated, or, for that matter, what type of
    prices are indicated (whether “actual”, mere estimates, or isolated spot prices), and, further, that there
    is no basis in the record for ascertaining that the prices would reflect the type of normal commercial
    quantities producers or exporters of subject merchandise would require. Commerce agreed that its
    preference is to rely on data that contain volume and value information, but it determined that the
    instant review presented a “similar fact pattern[ ]” to certain of its precedents wherein Commerce
    had used sources for major inputs without such data.10 The defendant adds that if “the factual
    circumstances warrant using prices that have no associated quantities, Commerce will do so.” Def’s
    Br. at 28-29. But it does not elaborate on what those “factual circumstances” are, and neither does
    Commerce.
    The plaintiffs, however, argue that in both of the referenced determinations,
    Commerce had valued steel inputs using a publicly available industry data bank that represented
    “national-level steel monitoring by a joint government/industry board” in India and which was used
    throughout the Indian steel industry as a market index for steel prices, whereas for this review no
    such “market” representation exists with respect to the DAM data, as is evident in the affidavits they
    submitted from Bangladeshi Pangasius farmers and from an attorney that had conducted interviews
    with those farmers and with the DAM official that supplied the wholesale price data to the
    10
    Sixth Review I&D Memo at 12, referencing Certain Steel Nails from the People's Republic
    of China, 
    73 Fed. Reg. 33977
     (June 16, 2008) (inter alia, final LTFV determination) and
    accompanying I&D Memo at cmt. 10, and Steel Wire Garment Hangers from the People's Republic
    of China, 
    73 Fed. Reg. 47587
     (Aug. 14, 2008) (final LTFV determination) and accompanying I&D
    Memo at cmt 4.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 25
    respondents. See PDoc 210 at Ex. 13. Countering, but without addressing the purported farmer
    affidavits of record, the defendant contends the plaintiffs’ Bangladeshi attorney’s affidavit is “self-
    serving”11 hearsay, whereas the “official letter” concerning the DAM data “is a direct representation
    from the Government of Bangladesh[, and a]s such, the data attains the status of being inherently
    objective data”. Def’s Br. at 31-32.
    If an affidavit is made from personal knowledge and sets forth specific facts, then
    whether it is “self-serving” is beside the point. See, e.g., Caterpillar Inc. v. Sturman Industries, Inc.,
    
    387 F.3d 1358
    , 1374-75 (Fed. Cir. 2004); Payne v. Pauley, 
    337 F.3d 767
     (7th Cir. 2003). On the
    charge of hearsay, Commerce’s hearings are subject to neither the Administrative Procedure Act, see
    19 C.F.R.§351.310(d)(2), nor, e.g., the Federal Rules of Evidence.12 The defendant’s argument
    rather concerns credibility, and its latter point, for that matter, would be just as apt with respect to
    the affidavit of the Chief of FSD of BAS, concerning her government’s “inherently objective data.”
    In any event, the explanation is not part of Commerce’s determination. Commerce
    did not, in fact, address this affidavit at all. But if matter is in the record and relevant, it must be
    addressed, and the affidavit submitted by the plaintiffs, concerning DAM’s price data collection
    methodology, appears of record and relevant. It should, thus, have been addressed, including, at a
    11
    The plaintiffs especially take issue with Commerce’s disregard for the contents of the
    affidavit of the attorney, whom they had dispatched to interview the same DAM official that had
    supplied the wholesale price data to the respondents. The affidavit purports the DAM official’s
    description of the “scientific method” as involving interviews of local wholesale businessmen who
    provide estimates, and then the DAM officials “just record the average price of pangas based on
    these estimates provided during these interviews” and without validation.
    12
    Even then, and if pursuant thereto, one exception to Fed. R. Evid. 802’s proscription
    against the admissibility of hearsay, of course, is “a statement describing or explaining an event or
    condition, made while or immediately after the declarant perceived it”. Fed. R. Evid. 803(1).
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                           Page 26
    minimum, notice of any concerns regarding its veracity. See 
    19 C.F.R. §351.301
    (c)(3)(iv) & (5)(i);
    cf., e.g., Certain Color Television Receivers from the People’s Republic of China, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 20594
     (Apr. 16, 2004) (final LTFV determination), I&D Memo at cmt. 9 (contacting Infodrive India,
    the company from which parties had obtained proposed surrogate value data, in order to better
    understand the company’s data collection methods). A lack of attempted corroboration cannot,
    ceteris paribus, reasonably result in construal against the submitter.
    While an agency’s “decision of less than ideal clarity” may be sustained if its “path
    may reasonably be discerned”, Bowman Transportation, Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc.,
    
    419 U.S. 281
    , 286 (1974), the Sixth Review determination remains unclear as to what circumstances
    would permit reasonable reliance upon price data without associated volume or value information,
    or why the circumstances here so warrant. In essence, Commerce effectively states it has “done so
    in the past” in “similar” circumstances, and the reader is left unclear as to the parameters of what
    those similar factual circumstances are.13 Since remand is otherwise required, if Commerce again
    reaches this issue on remand, it will need to explain with precision what those circumstances are, and
    state why the present ones are similar.
    Commerce and the defendant also call attention to the fact that the DAM worksheets
    provided 2828 data points whereas the FS 07-09 data had only 12 price points, and that country-wide
    pangas production in Bangladesh during 2008-2009 totaled 59474 metric tons (“MT”), which
    13
    See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 12 & n.41, referencing Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp
    From the Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Final Results of the First Antidumping Duty Administrative
    Review and First New Shipper Review, 
    72 Fed. Reg. 52052
     (Sep. 12, 2007) and accompanying I&D
    Memo at cmt. 1. As summarized, supra, Commerce simply states with respect to that determination:
    “the SV for the main input, raw shrimp, is derived from a source without quantity data.”
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 27
    compared favorably versus the total volume of pangas production covered by the Philippine FS 07-
    09 during the same period: 47.14 MT as surveyed, or 2264 MT if sourced from Status of the
    Pangasius Industry in the Philippines. See, e.g., Def’s Br. at 28-29. The plaintiffs take issue with
    the fact that the figures for “country-wide pangas production for Bangladesh” stated in the Sixth
    Review came not from the DAM 08/09 data but from the Statistical Yearbook of Bangladesh
    published by the Bangladesh Department of Fisheries. The defendant admits there is “some
    uncertainty” as to the total production figures, but it argues that even taking the highest of the alleged
    Philippine production figures on the record, 2264 MT, and comparing it with the lowest production
    figure of record for Bangladesh, 58474 MT, “it is clear that Bangladesh has a much larger pangas
    producing industry than the Philippines.” Def’s Br. at 16, referencing Sixth Review I&D Memo at
    13-14. That may be true, but once again that is not quite what Commerce stated. And cf. Sixth
    Review I&D Memo at 6, quoting, in part, Policy Bulletin 04.1 (“The statute does not require that the
    Department use a surrogate country . . . that is the most significant producer of comparable
    merchandise. . . . The extent to which a country is a significant producer should not be judged against
    . . . the comparative production of the five or six countries on [the Office of Policy]’s surrogate
    country list.”) (italics in original). Commerce only remarked that it “believe[d] these distinctions
    should be considered in the context of comparing these two competing data sources.” Sixth Review
    I&D Memo at 13. On the other hand, if Commerce is only inclined to tailor a finding equivalent to
    the defendant’s on remand, then remand would be futile. Cf. Bowman, supra, 419 U.S. at 286.
    Be that as it may, Commerce’s determination that the Bangladeshi DAM 08/09 are
    “fuller” relies on a comparison of the 2828 data points in that set that were obtained from 64 of the
    70 reporting districts, versus, for the FS 07-09 set, 12 data points obtained from the 5 of the largest
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                           Page 28
    pangas-producing provinces out of 81 provinces in the Philippines. The plaintiffs argue that because
    the DAM data are weekly and the FS 07-09 are annual and at a higher level of aggregation, this is
    like comparing apples and oranges and therefore not meaningful. The court cannot agree that the
    comparison is not without some quantum of probative value on data set “fullness”, at least of
    country-wide wholesale prices of Pangasius in Bangladesh; theoretical conversion of the FS 07-09
    data to weekly data points would still result, at least in absolute terms, of a set approximately one-
    quarter the size of the DAM 08/09 set, assuming the court’s back-of-the-envelope calculation is
    correct. The court can agree, however, that it would be illogical to infer from such observation that
    the DAM 08/09 are therefore “better” than the FS 07-09 data (e.g., that the DAM 08/09 data are
    therefore more “comprehensive”), because the comparison does not prove that the Philippine
    sampling methodology does not provide statistically equivalent representation, in comparison with
    the DAM 08/09 data, of country-wide farm-gate prices for Pangasius. That does not address
    Commerce’s implicit and additional consideration of Pangasius production as being greater in
    Bangladesh than in the Philippines, supra; it merely leads back to whether farm-gate or wholesale
    pricing are the “better” data in this instance -- concerning which Commerce found both data sets
    equivalent as far as being “publicly available, from a potential surrogate country, contemporaneous
    with the POR, broad market averages, [and] equally specific to the main input” in any event.
    With respect to the reliability of the data sets, for the DAM 08/09 price data
    Commerce gave credence to the representation of the Bangladeshi official that they were “collected
    using a scientific method . . . using a structured questionnaire”. As indicated above, that would also
    appear true of the FS 08-09 data, but in any event, Commerce stated “this further explanation on the
    data collection methods provides additional information which, in part, addresses any concerns with
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 29
    respect to reliability,” and that it has also used sources for major inputs in other cases that do not
    contain specific volume or value data. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 12-14; see also supra, note
    10. That may sound reasonable up to a point, but it does not address the plaintiffs’ central contention
    that there is “no record evidence that links these two different Bangladeshi sources or any other basis
    for assuming that the Bangladesh worksheets cover more ‘sales’ or quantities than the Philippine
    national statistics.” Pls’ Reply at 11.
    Statistics require proper context. To take the plaintiffs’ example, “if each data point
    in the DAM internal worksheets represented 5 kgs -- and nothing on this record indicates any
    quantities associated with each data point, or if there are any -- then the 2,828 data points would
    represent pricing for only 14.14 MT, which is less than the FS[ ]07-09 total quantity of sales.” Id.
    at n.13 (italics omitted). This seems a primary reason the plaintiffs have been arguing that, ceteris
    paribus, the DAM 08/09 data are not necessarily “better” than the FS 07-09 data, and the court
    agrees that these aspects of the Sixth Review determination, concerning the meaning of the absence
    of volume information among the DAM 08/09, and whether that set’s prices would be representative
    of commercial quantities of whole fish sales, also require re-examination or clarification. In that
    regard, while Commerce did not address the reliability of the FS 07-09 data similarly, it apparently
    deemed them, as above indicated, reliable. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 12 (“we disagree . . . that
    the record evidence . . . is unreliable”).
    The plaintiffs also contend Commerce acted inconsistently with respect to
    determining that the DAM spreadsheets were “finalized” despite the numerous instance of
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                          Page 30
    “#DIV/0!” symbols in certain fields,14 when in the precedent Fifth Review Commerce had precisely
    pointed to the presence of those symbols among the data proffered by the plaintiffs, as obtained from
    the Government of the Philippines, as reason for not finding their data finalized. See Fifth Review,
    I&D Memo at 9-10. That was not, however, Commerce’s sole reason for rejection in the Fifth
    Review. The defendant points out that in contrast to the Fifth Review, for the Final Results
    Commerce had before it an “official endorsement” from the Bangladeshi government, i.e, PDoc 195
    at Ex. 7. The Sixth Review I&D Memo, beginning on page 9, restates that Commerce had “legitimate
    concerns” during the Fifth Review “that the data may not have been finalized or was in draft form
    prior to publication” and offers explanation of why, for this Sixth Review,
    the DAM 08/09 data do[ ] not appear to be incomplete or not finalized. Here, we
    have a Bangladeshi Government official certifying as to the nature and breadth of the
    DAM 08/09 data, the completeness of the data, and the availability of the data to the
    public upon request.
    Sixth Review I&D Memo at 10. Commerce went on to interpret the presence of the #DIV/0! symbol
    in this review as “the function of the mathematical formula trying to perform a calculation on cells
    with no data in them” because “in every instance where the term ‘#DIV0!’ [sic] appears there is no
    weekly price data for that district.” Id. at 11. The court considers that the presence of #DIV/0!
    symbols on a spreadsheet may reasonably be interpreted to indicate a lack of finality if other
    14
    Specifically, in the review at bar, Commerce “d[id] not find the appearance of this term
    of any significance such that it would question the DAM data’s quality or reliability,” as “the term
    appears in the DAM 08/09 data when there is no data for any given district of any given week for
    that month.” Sixth Review I&D Memo at 11.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 31
    circumstances are present and likewise indicative.         For that reason, the court cannot find
    unreasonableness in Commerce’s consideration of the issue for this Sixth Review.15
    3. Surrogate Country Selection in Light of Entire Record
    The plaintiffs’ broader argument is that because Commerce found a “degree of
    equivalence” between the DAM 08/09 and FS 07-09 data with respect to each of the key surrogate
    value selection criteria, Commerce’s failure to consider the totality of the surrogate value record was
    an abuse of discretion.16 The defendant argues that the silence in 19 U.S.C. §1677b(c)(l) as to what
    15
    I.e., the plaintiffs may be justified, as they argue, in complaining of goalpost-shifting at
    the hands of Commerce in a number of respects including this one, as, for example, in the Fifth
    Review the Philippines data they submitted were also accompanied by an “official endorsement,”
    and the record may have involved inappropriate denigration (cf., e.g., notes 6 & 7, supra; cf. also
    Public Hearing Transcript (Jan 26, 2011), PDoc 234, at 51-52 (regarding unprofessional data set
    acronym creativity)), but the court cannot conclude that Commerce’s conclusion on the issue for this
    administrative proceeding was unreasonable, given the standard of judicial review.
    16
    In particular, the plaintiffs aver that the record contains the financial statements of
    Philippine companies who produce only frozen fish products and the financial statements for two
    Bangladeshi companies producing solely frozen shrimp products and one producing both frozen fish
    and frozen fish products, and that Commerce’s “clear preference” for purposes of surrogate valuation
    is to select sources that are producers of identical merchandise. Pls’ Br. at 24, quoting Polyethylene
    Retail Carrier Bags from the People’s Republic of China, 
    74 Fed. Reg. 6857
     (Feb. 11, 2009), I&D
    Memo at cmt. 2.10. They further aver that the record of Philippine data on secondary material
    inputs, energy factors, and packing materials is more contemporaneous to the POR than the
    Bangladesh data for those inputs. To the extent Commerce considered these arguments, it found the
    inclusion of frozen shrimp production among the available Bangladeshi data inconsequential to
    valuing the main factors involved in frozen fish production because “the production processes
    (capital structure) of which we believe to be similar [are] in terms of: cold processing area, freezing
    machines, and cold storage.” Sixth Review I&D Memo at 22. This observation may not seem
    unreasonable in isolation, but it was made in the context of considering the suitability of those
    Bangladesh companies’ financial statements, i.e., after Commerce had determined that the DAM
    08/09 data were the “better” data. The observation was not in the context of considering the record
    as a whole, including all relevant facts, when determining whether the Bangladesh data or the
    Philippines data were the best information of record available. See Policy Bulletin 04.1 (“the country
    with the best factors data is selected as the primary surrogate country”) (italics added). Commerce
    (continued...)
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 32
    constitutes “best” available information provides Commerce “broad discretion to determine the
    definition of ‘best available information’ in a reasonable manner on a case-by-case basis”. Def’s Br.
    at 17, quoting Goldlink, 431 F. Supp. 2d at 1327 (citation omitted). In this instance, the defendant
    argues, “degree of equivalence” does not mean Commerce found the data “equivalent” but only with
    respect to certain factors, and that Commerce did, in fact, consider the entire record, ultimately
    finding the DAM 08/09 data a “fuller set” based on the number of data points as an indication of
    broader market coverage than the BAS data.
    Generally speaking, the “fullness” of a data set does not address its suitability for the
    purposes sought by Commerce. Cf. Laizou Auto Brake Equipment Co. v. United States, 
    32 CIT 711
    ,
    717 (2008) ( “[i]t is clear that a larger data set, in and of itself, is not necessarily better in valuing
    factors of production than a smaller one”). The defendant adds, then, that the determination is also
    based on the fact that Bangladesh produced significantly more Pangasius than the Philippines during
    the POR. Def’s Br. at 12-13, referencing Sixth Review I&D Memo at 13-14; see also supra. Based
    upon these and other17 significant differences, the defendant argues it was reasonable for Commerce
    to find the DAM 08/09 data the best information available without the need to examine other factor
    16
    (...continued)
    also considered contemporaneity, but only in the context of the data for the “main input,” i.e., whole
    live fish. Commerce did not address the plaintiffs’ argument that Philippine secondary material data
    were more contemporaneous because it “ha[d] selected Bangladesh as the primary surrogate” and
    its “practice is to rely on upon the surrogate country for all SVs whenever possible.” Sixth Review
    I&D Memo at 21. That is, once again, putting the cart before the horse.
    17
    The defendant also points to Commerce’s finding of price volatility in the BAS data that
    can be explained by the record indication of BAS data including cleaned and cut fish with
    “substantially higher” prices than whole and live fish. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 13-14. As
    indicated above, this finding will be re-examined and/or may be rendered moot upon remand.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 33
    data as a “tie breaker” between the two data sets. The defendant-intervenors add that “the law does
    not oblige Commerce to preempt every possible riposte or to organize its determination according
    to a party’s particular taste.” Def-Ints’ Br. at 5.
    Commerce’s finding of a “degree of equivalence” concerned purported farm-gate
    price data and wholesale price data. As above mentioned, Commerce determined along the path of
    equivalence as far as finding both sets “publicly available, from a potential surrogate country,
    contemporaneous with the POR, broad market averages, [and] equally specific to the main input[.]”
    Also as above mentioned, Commerce observed there is no specific evidence on the record as to what
    costs or expenses are included or not included in the DAM wholesale prices, Sixth Review I&D
    Memo at 11-12. That, however, is aside from Commerce’s stated preference for using farm-gate
    pricing, as is the fact that the DAM 08/09 data provide, arguendo, broader market coverage than the
    BAS data, as well as the fact that Bangladesh produced “significantly,” arguendo, more Pangasius
    than the Philippines during the POR. At the relevant point of “equivalence,” it is unclear to the court
    why Commerce’s analysis of the data for the main input did not, then, abide its policy of examining
    the totality of available data, as the plaintiffs argue. Commerce’s Policy Bulletin 04.1states that “if
    more than one country has survived the selection process to this point, the country with the best
    factors data is selected as the primary surrogate country” (italics added), and the data for each
    surrogate factor of production are supposedly accorded equal importance. See, e.g., Folding Metal
    Tables and Chairs from the People’s Republic of China, 
    76 Fed. Reg. 2883
     (Jan. 18, 2011) (final
    review results), I&D Memo at cmt. 1C (“in selecting a surrogate country, we do not give more
    importance to financial ratios than to surrogate values for raw materials, but instead equally consider
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 34
    all surrogate data in selecting a surrogate country”) (italics added). Cf. Camau Frozen Seafood
    Processing Import Export Corp. v. United States, 36 CIT ___, ___, 
    880 F. Supp. 2d 1348
    , 1360-61
    (2012) (“Commerce’s conclusion that Bangladesh’s wage rate is the best available information for
    valuing the wage rate in Vietnam must be based on a reasonable reading of the entire record”)
    (italics added).
    Surrogate valuation is not an exact science, but Commerce must approximate the
    factors of production as accurately as feasible. Certainly Commerce has discretion as to what
    information in the record is “best,” and there may be instances where data are clearly “better,” but
    if information is “available” in the record, the statute does not confer discretion to avoid addressing
    it. Cf. 
    id.
     Commerce in this instance avoided considering the factors data for secondary material
    inputs, energy, and packing materials by determining, a priori, that the DAM 08/09 data represented
    the “best” data, resulting in the selection of Bangladeshi as the primary surrogate country. That
    logic precluded a fair selection of “the country with the best factors data . . . as the primary surrogate
    country” in the context of the record as a whole, including whatever “fairly detracts” as well as
    supports the determination of what is the “best” available information. The analysis is thus marred.
    As it is unclear what impact any particular factor has had on Commerce’s analysis
    to this point, remand of the entire issue of surrogate country selection as a whole is appropriate, and
    without precluding reconsideration of the entire record for and against the selection of the primary
    surrogate country upon which to value the respondents’ factors of production. If Commerce also
    deems it necessary to gather additional information, it has the discretion to reopen there record.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                           Page 35
    V. Use of Unadjusted Factor Useage Data
    In the underlying review, the respondent Vinh Hoan submitted farming factor (input
    usage) data requested by Commerce, including for its affiliate, Van Duc. Vinh Hoan reported Van
    Duc’s factor usage data for fish feed, labor, fingerlings, medicines and salts and lime upon the basis
    of Van Duc electronic books and records. See, e.g., Vinh Hoan Verification Report (Dec. 20, 2010),
    PDoc 214, CDoc 60, at 11. At verification, Commerce noticed there had been no recording of feed
    for the first five months of the POR. Id.18 Van Duc explained that the farms were new and the
    booking procedures had not been followed but averred that all of the activity in those months was
    accounted for in the warehousing record system in the January 2009 records accounting for the usage
    for the preceding five months. 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs requested that Commerce either reject Vinh Hoan’s
    reported farming factors data outright or, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. §1677e, assume that the highest
    reported monthly usage of the inputs applied to the missing months. See CDoc 61 at 28-31 and Atts
    B and C. For the Final Results, Commerce accepted Vinh Hoan’s arguments that it had “fully”
    reported its farming factors. The Sixth Review I&D Memo quotes from a portion of the verification
    report as follows:
    When asked, Van Duc officials provided us proof for January 2009 electronic
    warehouse-out slips. . . . Company officials explained that each of the warehouse-out
    18
    “Company officials explained that activity for the first five months of the POR was not
    recorded for feed until January 2009, as the farms were in their infancy, they did not know the
    procedures, and the records had not been delivered to [Van Duc headquarters].” PDoc 214, CDoc
    60, at 11. When reviewing labor, it also found that “activity for the first six months of the POR was
    not recorded . . . until February 2009, as the farms were in their infancy, they did not know the
    procedures, and the records had not been delivered to [Van Duc headquarters].” Id. at 14.
    Verification exhibits showed similar problems for fingerlings, medicines, salt and lime. See id. at
    Exs 20-24.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                           Page 36
    slips for January 2009 for each pond for each farm has a note detailing how much of
    the total activity is attributable to prior months.
    Sixth Review I&D Memo at 35. Commerce did not note any discrepancies with this explanation and
    the documents provided at verification, and found that “the company explained how consumption
    was accounted for in its normal books and records” and “verified the consumption reported by Vinh
    Hoan by tying the numbers to the general ledger and/or financial statements.” Id.
    The plaintiffs argue this shows only that Commerce verified some of Vinh Hoan’s
    consumption amounts for those select months for which data were reported and does not explain why
    no adjustment was made to account for their “critical omission,” or articulate how the margin
    calculation for Vinh Hoan is “as accurate as possible” given the verified evidence that Van Duc did
    not report full farming factors for the full POR, or explain why Van Duc’s explanation “was an
    adequate remedy for the fact that key consumption data remained unreported for multiple months
    of the POR.” Pls’ Br. at 38 (emphasis in original). The plaintiffs contend Commerce failed to
    provide a reasoned and adequate explanation of why “some adjustment” on the basis of facts
    available to account for the missing data was unnecessary. See 19 U.S.C. §1677e(a) (providing that
    Commerce “shall” use facts available if “necessary information is not available on the record” or if
    submitted information “cannot be verified”).
    The two primary objectives of verification are to verify the accuracy of data submitted
    in a response, and to verify that relevant data were not omitted from the response. 15 Antidumping
    Manual §II.A. (Dep’t Comm. 2009). When calculating Vinh Hoan’s NV, Commerce relied upon
    Van Duc’s farming factor usage rates without resorting to facts available because it found that the
    allegedly “missing” data were not, in fact, missing, and Commerce did not find any discrepancy in
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                           Page 37
    Vinh Hoan’s responses. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 35, and Verification Report at 11, PDoc
    214. According the general presumption of administrative regularity to which Commerce is entitled,
    the court cannot second-guess that Commerce did not properly verify how the usage data were
    accounted for in Vinh Hoan’s books and records in the absence of specific contrary evidence of
    record. The determination is therefore supported by substantial record evidence and is otherwise in
    accordance with law.
    VI. Ministerial Error Allegations
    After publication of the final results, the plaintiffs alleged two ministerial errors,
    namely that Commerce should adjust the surrogate financial ratio calculations to account for
    inventory changes incorrectly excluded from the selling, general and administrative expenses
    (“SG&A”) and profit calculations the changes in finished goods inventories derived from the
    financial statements of Apex, Gemini, and Fine Foods, and that Commerce had inadvertently failed
    to value the electricity and coal used to generate Vinh Hoan’s by-products. PDoc 251. With respect
    to Fine Foods, Commerce responded that there had been no error.19 With respect to the other alleged
    ministerial errors, Commerce admitted error, but declined to amend the Final Results, contending
    that correction would not affect the margins of any of the respondents. Id.
    19
    See Ministerial Error Allegations Memorandum to Gary Taverman, Acting Deputy
    Assistant Secretary for AD/CVD Operations, dated April 13, 2011, PDoc 249, at 3. Commerce also
    stated that the plaintiffs’ challenge was actually methodological, but that reason does not appear
    valid, as the only apparent avenue to raise the plaintiffs’ claim was ministerial, given Commerce’s
    departure from its Preliminary Results and its sua sponte decision to use Fine Food’s financial
    statements for the purpose of calculating surrogate financial ratios. The plaintiffs contend they only
    submitted those statements for the purpose of valuing whole live fish, not for the purpose of
    calculating surrogate financial ratios, and Commerce’s decision was without the benefit of briefing
    or argument from the parties. See Sixth Review I&D Memo at 22.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                           Page 38
    Regarding the plaintiffs argument on Commerce’s calculation of SG&A and profit
    derived from Apex’s and Gemini’s financial statements, Commerce’s practice is to account for
    inventory changes in the calculation of the denominators of surrogate financial ratios. See, e.g.,
    Seamless Refined Copper Pipe and Tube from the People’s Republic of China, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 60725
    (Oct. 1, 2010) (final less than fair value (“LTFV”) determination), I&D Memo at cmt. 2 (explaining
    that Commerce’s practice is to (1) adjust the materials, labor, and energy expenses for changes in
    work-in-process inventories, and (2) adjust those expenses as well as factory overhead expenses
    included in the denominator of the SG&A and profit ratios “for changes in finished goods
    inventories”); Polyethylene Terephthalate Film, Sheet, and Strip from the People’s Republic of
    China, 
    73 Fed. Reg. 55039
     (Sep. 24, 2008) (final LTFV determination) and accompanying I&D
    Memo at cmt. 3.
    Normally, de minimis non curat lex, and “ the administering authority may . . . decline
    to take into account adjustments which are insignificant to the price or value of the merchandise.”
    19 U.S.C. §1677f-l(a)(2). Commerce’s regulations define an insignificant adjustment as “any
    individual adjustment having an ad valorem effect of less than .33 percent or any group of
    adjustments having an ad valorem effect of less than 1 percent, of the export price, constructed
    export price or normal value, as the case may be.” 
    19 C.F.R. §351.413
    . Here, except for
    Commerce’s averment, the court has no basis for concluding what effect, if any, correction of the
    admitted ministerial errors, in addition to correction of any other identified errors, would have on
    the analysis. Given that even a “trifle” among the calculations in this instance may mean the
    difference between a finding of dumping and a finding of no dumping, it is appropriate that
    Commerce correct for error, particularly where remand is otherwise required. Cf., e.g., NTN Bearing
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 39
    Corp. v. United States, 
    74 F.3d 1204
     (Fed. Cir. 1995) (“where a remand is made to correct clerical
    errors made by the ITA, it would be paradoxical to deny consideration at the same time of similar
    errors of others”); Brother Industries, Ltd. v. United States, 
    15 CIT 332
    , 
    771 F. Supp. 374
     (1991)
    (“court-ordered amendments of ministerial errors are not destructive of the ITA’s ability to manage
    its proceedings” and “a party’s ministerial or clerical errors have warranted correction where remand
    has been necessary on other grounds”) (citations omitted). On remand, Commerce is requested to
    incorporate correction (depending, of course, upon Gemini’s financial data’s continued inclusion in
    the analysis; see supra) and also include the value of coal and electricity in the by-product analysis.
    Also, in the Sixth Review results, Commerce regarded the plaintiffs’ argument that
    it had not accounted for the increases in Fine Foods’ inventories of fish and shrimp when calculating
    the denominators of Fine Food’s surrogate overhead, SG&A and profit ratios, and Commerce denied
    error, taking the position (in contrast to the above) that “[t]he treatment of changes in inventory is
    done on a case-by-case basis”. After determining that the company’s statements lacked sufficient
    detail to account for work-in-progress inventory changes, Commerce intentionally excluded such
    incorporation into the denominator of its ratio calculations. See PDoc 249 at 3. Here, the plaintiffs
    repeat their contention that Fine Foods’ financial statements contained specific and discreet line
    items that would allow accurate capture in the relevant financial ratio denominators Commerce
    employs to account for inventory changes, e.g., the line items “Add: Opening Stock/Inventories” and
    “Less: Closing Stock/Inventories” in the cost of goods sold calculation. See PDoc 96 at Ex. 20, pp.
    23. Note 1.18 to the financial statements (“Valuation of Inventories”) indicates that the inventories
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                            Page 40
    were “of fisheries” as opposed to finished processed fish.20 Id., p. 20. Note 7 thereto (“Inventories”)
    itemizes the different materials included in inventory at the company’s two separate locations and
    aggregates the total inventories under the row labeled “Total fish.” Id., p. 23.
    The defendant responds Commerce properly determined that the financial statement
    did not contain sufficiently detailed information to make the adjustment and that the plaintiffs are
    incorrect because the portions of the financial statement plaintiffs identify in their brief do not
    contain the necessary information. The defendant argues that in order to make the change in
    inventory adjustment, the financial statement must identify what type of inventory to which the
    numbers refer (raw materials, processing material, by-product, packing inventory, trade good
    inventory, and self-produced finished goods inventory) and that the Fine Foods financial statement
    does not identify the type of inventory to which the line items refer. The defendant further explains
    that the type of inventory is critical in determining where to include the inventory changes in the
    financial ratio calculations, i.e., whether for overhead (“OH”), SG&A, and profit: if there is a change
    in raw materials inventory, it is included in the denominator of the OH calculation (as the plaintiffs
    argue should be the case here), but if there is a change in the processing material inventory, it is
    included in the numerator of the OH calculation, and if the inventory change is for trade goods or
    self-produced goods it is included in the SG&A and profit ratios. No adjustment is made if the
    change is in packing or by-product inventory.
    20
    Specifically, Note 1.18 states that “management has valued inventories as mentioned in
    the subsequent paragraphs”; that “[a]ll the fishes except those kept and reared for breeding are listed
    in the inventory as Trading Stock of fisheries”;and that “[a]ll these Trading Stocks of fisheries have
    been valued at estimated net realized values as per management’s best estimate considering various
    market factors like volatility, demand and supply and the choices of customers.” PDoc 96 at Ex.
    20, p. 20.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                               Page 41
    The court can agree with Commerce that the Fine Foods financial statement does not
    have the degree of specificity that Commerce requires, as it is unclear what “trading stock” means,
    unless that is a term of art (of which the court has not been apprised), and there is no indication of
    the extent to which work-in-process is included in that term, or in the “break-up” of inventory into
    “pangas,” “tilapia,” “common carp,” “fingerlings,” etc., on page 23 of the financial statements of
    Fine Foods, whose principal activities include “processing fish and marketing the same products in
    local and foreign market,” see id. at p. 17, note 1.3, and as there is no separate “finished goods”
    inventory itemization, especially of frozen processed finished goods, the summary might or might
    not be inclusive of a raw materials inventory itemization. See id. at p. 27, n. 22. Therefore, the
    figures under “Inventories,” in note 7, could be finished product, or work-in-process, or some
    combination, as Commerce implicitly determined. That does not mean, however, that it was
    appropriate for Commerce to avoid the obligation to use facts available pursuant to 19 U.S.C.
    §1677e(a), given that Commerce’s determination is that Fine Foods’ financial statement offers
    appropriate surrogate values, that Commerce’s indicated practice (to the extent the court has been
    able to discern it) is to account for inventory changes in the calculation of the surrogate financial
    ratios, that such practice is indicative of the necessity of that accounting, and that there are, clearly,
    changes in inventory indicated on Fine Foods financial statements. At a minimum, Commerce must
    address any viable substitute(s) therefor (or lack thereof) for its financial ratio calculations, and more
    clearly explain its reasoning.
    Court No. 11-00109                                                                       Page 42
    Conclusion
    For the above reasons, the matter must be, and hereby is, remanded for
    reconsideration and further explanation in accordance with the foregoing.
    The results of remand shall be filed by September 3, 2013, comments thereon, if any,
    by October 3, 2013, and rebuttal commentary, if any, by October 18, 2013.
    So ordered.
    /s/ R. Kenton Musgrave
    R. Kenton Musgrave, Senior Judge
    Dated: May 23, 2013
    New York, New York
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-00109

Citation Numbers: 2013 CIT 63

Judges: Musgrave

Filed Date: 5/23/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014

Authorities (16)

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skf-usa-inc-and-skf-gmbh-and-fag-kugelfischer-georg-schafer-ag-and-fag , 254 F.3d 1022 ( 2001 )

allegheny-ludlum-corp-ak-steel-corp-butler-armco-independent-union-jl , 346 F.3d 1368 ( 2003 )

Huvis Corp. v. United States , 570 F.3d 1347 ( 2009 )

Vinh Quang Fisheries Corp. v. United States , 33 Ct. Int'l Trade 1277 ( 2009 )

Jinan Yipin Corp., Ltd. v. United States , 800 F. Supp. 2d 1226 ( 2011 )

Brother Industries, Ltd. v. United States , 15 Ct. Int'l Trade 332 ( 1991 )

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american-silicon-technologies-elkem-metals-company-and-globe , 261 F.3d 1371 ( 2001 )

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Consolidated Edison Co. v. National Labor Relations Board , 59 S. Ct. 206 ( 1938 )

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