Ausimont SPA v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 865 ( 2001 )


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  •                                         Slip Op. 01 - 92
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    :
    AUSIMONT SPA and AUSIMONT USA, :
    :
    Plaintiffs,           :            PUBLIC VERSION
    :
    v                     :            Before: MUSGRAVE, JUDGE
    :
    THE UNITED STATES,                     :            Court No. 98-10-03063
    :
    Defendant,            :
    :
    E.I. DUPONT DE NEMOURS,                :
    :
    Defendant-Intervenor. :
    :
    [Plaintiffs’ motion for judgment upon the agency record granted in part, denied in part, and
    remanded to Commerce.]
    Dated: August 2, 2001
    MRC Inc. (John Hoellen), Washington, D.C., for plaintiffs.
    Stuart E. Schiffer, Acting Assistant Attorney General; David M. Cohen, Director,
    Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice (Lucius B. Lau),
    for defendant.
    Wilmer Cutler & Pickering (Ronald I. Meltzer, John D. Greenwald, Francesca E. Bignami,
    and Christopher J. Kent), Washington, D.C., for defendant-intervenor.
    OPINION
    Plaintiffs Ausimont SpA and Ausimont USA (“Ausimont”) move for Rule 56.2 judgment
    upon the agency record for the August 1, 1996 through July 31, 1997 review period (“POR”)
    compiled by the International Trade Administration, United States Department of Commerce
    (“Commerce”) sub nom. Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy: Final Results of
    Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 49080
     (Sep. 14, 1998) (“Final Results”.)
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                           Page 2
    The Defendant United States (the “government”) and the Defendant-Intervenor E.I. DuPont de
    Nemours (“DuPont”) urge that the Final Results be sustained as published.
    Two issues are presented for consideration: (1) whether the “normal value”1 (“NV”) of the
    subject merchandise was based on home market sales which were made outside the ordinary course
    of trade or not in the usual commercial quantities, and (2) whether it was improper not to include
    imputed credit expenses and inventory carrying costs in the denominator of the constructed export
    price (“CEP”) profit allocation ratio (“CEP profit”). The first issue requires remand for further
    proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Commerce’s treatment of CEP profit is sustained.
    Background
    Since 1988, Ausimont USA has imported polytetraflouroethylene (“PTFE”) subject to
    Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy: Antidumping Duty Order, 
    53 Fed. Reg. 33163
    (Aug. 30, 1988). In 1993, Commerce determined that “wet reactor bead” constituted “imported parts
    and components” of granular PTFE resin and that the value-added difference in transforming the one
    into the other was “small” and that therefore the outstanding order encompassed wet reactor bead.
    Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy: Final Affirmative Determination of
    Circumvention of Antidumping Duty Order, 
    58 Fed. Reg. 26100
     (Apr. 30, 1993) (“Circumvention
    1
    “Normal value” is “the price at which the foreign like product is first sold (or, in the
    absence of a sale, offered for sale) for consumption in the exporting country, in the usual commercial
    quantities and in the ordinary course of trade and, to the extent practicable, at the same level of trade
    as the export price or constructed export price.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(1)(B)(i) (1994). “Foreign like
    product” is merchandise which is produced in the same country and by the same person and which
    is identical in physical characteristics to the subject merchandise or is “like” subject merchandise
    in component material and in purposes used, and either approximates equal commercial value of
    subject merchandise or is reasonably determined, by Commerce, to be comparable to subject
    merchandise. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (16) (1994).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                    PUBLIC VERSION                                           Page 3
    Determination”.) See 19 U.S.C. § 1677j (1988). That determination was sustained in Ausimont v.
    United States, 
    19 CIT 151
    , 
    882 F. Supp. 1087
     (1995).
    The instant POR was publicly initiated2 on September 25, 1997 via a questionnaire issued
    to Ausimont SpA containing a glossary which read in part: “[i]n calculating [NV], the Department
    will consider only those sales in the comparison market that are . . . made under conditions and
    practices that, for a reasonable period of time prior to the date of sale of the subject merchandise,
    have been normal for sales of the foreign like product.” Letter with Questionnaire from Commerce
    to Ausimont of 9/24/97 app. I at 10 (PDoc 3, Fiche 4, Fr. 19). See Def’s3 PubApp 3 at app. I.
    Ausimont responded on November 6, 1997 with “diskettes and printouts . . . contain[ing] a sale-by-
    sale listing of all virgin and filled PTFE granular resin, plus wet reactor bead, sold in Italy during the
    period” and explanation: that granular PTFE resin is sold in a polyethylene-lined drum and “wet
    reactor bead is sold in a bag”; that all of Ausimont SpA’s customers constituted “one class of
    customers only – unrelated fabricators who transform granular PTFE resin into semifinished and
    finished manufactured products”; and that there was “one channel of distribution only – shipment
    of orders directly from Ausimont’s plant or warehouse to the customers” on a “delivered basis” via
    unrelated common carrier. Letter with Questionnaire Response from Ausimont to Commerce of
    2
    
    62 Fed. Reg. 50292
     (Sep. 25, 1997). See 19 CFR 351.215(b) (1997). Administrative
    review assesses the amount by which the home market NV of subject merchandise exceeds its
    “export price” (“EP”) or, if circumstances warrant, its CEP and establishes the deposit rate for future
    entries. See generally 
    19 U.S.C. §§ 1675
    (a)(2)(A) and (C), 1677(35)(A), 1677a, 1677b (1994).
    3
    Ausimont and the government are abbreviated “Pls” and “Def” in references to their briefs.
    References to the public and confidential record information are to the official record (“PDoc” and
    “CDoc”, respectively), as microfiched, with occasional references to public and confidential
    information as appended to the parties’ briefs, denoted herein as “PubApp” and “ConfApp”.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                           Page 4
    11/06/97 (“QR 1”) (PDoc 13, Fiche 5, Frs. 1, 16, 26, 29, 32, 36, 38, 45; CDoc 1, Fiche 13, Frs. 1,
    16, 26, 29, 32, 36, 38, 45). See Def.’s ConfApp 1.
    On February 23, 1998, Commerce sent a supplemental questionnaire and matching
    instructions to Ausimont requiring that it
    note that . . . data is also required in the U.S. and comparison market sales
    listings for wet reactor bead products in both markets[, e]nsure that you have
    provided home market sales of all products that can be matched to reactor
    bead that is further manufactured in the United States[,] and provide a
    complete description of the home market products and sales that you believe
    are the most appropriate comparisons to [imported] wet reactor bead . . . .
    Letter with Supplemental Questionnaire from Commerce to Ausimont of 2/23/98, Sec. A, 3-4 (PDoc
    18, Fiche 8, Frs. 40, 43-44; CDoc 4, Fiche 19, Frs. 57, 60-61). See Def’s ConfApp 2, Sec. A, 3-4.
    On March 16, 1998, Ausimont responded, in particular noting that the “appropriate home market
    reactor bead code is provided with each individual further-manufactured sales transaction in
    Ausimont’s U.S. sales listing.” Letter with Supplemental Questionnaire Response from Ausimont
    to Commerce of 3/16/98 (“QR 2”) at “SQR-9” and “SQR-10” (PDoc 21, Fiche 9, Frs. 1, 20-21;
    CDoc 5, Fiche 20, Frs. 1, 20-21). See Def’s ConfApp 3 at “SQR-9” and “SQR-10.”
    Commerce verified Ausimont’s responses at the Bollate offices (Milano, Italy) over April
    6-10, 1998. See Verification Memorandum of 5/4/98 (PDoc 28, Fiche 11, Fr. 14; CDoc 10, Fiche
    22, Fr. 47); Def’s ConfApp 5. The verification report notes correction of “a minor error in reporting
    the calculation of the packing costs for wet reactor bead for certain home market and U.S. sales”
    which had been submitted by Ausimont officials and describes discussion of wet reactor bead sales
    in general and a “pre-selected” sale of wet reactor bead in particular. 
    Id.
     (PDoc 28, Fiche 11, Frs.
    16, 23-24; CDoc 10, Fiche 22, Frs. 47, 56-57); Def’s ConfApp 5 at 4, 8-9.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                 PUBLIC VERSION                                            Page 5
    The preliminary analysis for the POR noted
    three sales transactions in the home market of wet reactor bead, comprising
    approximately 2.10 percent of the total quantity sold and 1.73 percent of the
    total value sold of the foreign like products. . . . [T]otal sales of further
    manufactured wet reactor bead in the U.S. market comprise more than [ ]
    percent (by volume and value) of all subject merchandise sales in the U.S.
    market.
    The size of the margin in these preliminary results is due, to a large extent,
    to the fact that the U.S. sales of further manufactured wet reactor bead have
    relatively a high cost of further manufacturing (i.e. on the average is
    approximately [ ] percent of the sales value), which, when deducted with the
    other charges and adjustments from the U.S. price, yields a substantially
    lower value than the foreign unit price of wet reactor bead sales in the home
    market. Our analysis of the company’s sales data for both the U.S. and home
    markets shows that the average net U.S. unit price [of wet reactor bead] is
    approximately US$[ ]/lb., whereas the average wet reactor bead sale [price
    in the home market] is approximately US$[ ]/lb. We note that in the
    previous review, there were no sales in the home market of wet reactor bead,
    and all U.S. sales of further manufactured wet reactor bead were matched to
    the constructed value for such sales.
    Analysis Memorandum of 5/4/98 (PDoc 29, Fiche 11, Frs. 42-43; CDoc 11, Fiche 22, Frs. 75-76);
    Def’s ConfApp 6 at 1-2.
    Commerce published its preliminary results on May 11, 1998, finding that NV exceeded CEP
    by 40.90 percent. Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 25826
     (May
    11, 1998.) Ausimont objected, at this point contending inter alia that NV should not have been
    based on home market wet reactor bead sales since they had not been made in the ordinary course
    of trade or in the usual commercial quantities, and contending that the CEP profit ratio was faulty
    because imputed credit expenses and inventory carrying costs were included in the numerator but
    not in the denominator.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 6
    In the Final Results, Commerce rejected Ausimont’s request to exclude the home market wet
    reactor bead sales on the ground that the case record was compiled without intimation that these
    sales had been made outside the ordinary course of trade until Ausimont filed its administrative case
    brief, and that Ausimont had not met its burden of proof “in light of this record evidence.” 63 Fed.
    Reg. at 49081.     Specifically, Commerce stated the general preference under 19 U.S.C. §
    1677b(a)(1)(A) is to use home market sales of the foreign like product to determine NV if possible
    before resorting to constructed value (“CV”), that home market sales made outside the ordinary
    course of trade are to be excluded per 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(1)(B)(i), and that cases including Murata
    Mfg. Co. v. United States, 
    17 CIT 259
    , 
    820 F. Supp. 603
     (1993) place the burden of establishing
    extraordinary sales upon the claimant. 
    Id.
    Commerce stated that the relevant home market sales for price-based comparison to
    merchandise further manufactured after importation into the United States are those of products
    “identical or similar” to U.S. imports of subject merchandise, and that since U.S.
    further-manufactured sales involved imported wet reactor bead that was further processed into
    finished PTFE resin, the home market wet reactor bead sales were deemed relevant for that purpose.
    
    Id.
     Commerce then noted that Ausimont provided home market wet reactor bead sales in its initial
    home market sales listing without claiming inclusion or analysis thereof was inappropriate, that the
    supplemental questionnaire sent to Ausimont indicated the intent to use the reported home market
    wet reactor bead sales in the analysis, and that Ausimont’s supplemental response, as with its initial
    response,
    made no claim that such home market sales were inappropriate for use in our
    analysis for any reason, much less that such sales were inappropriate
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 7
    specifically because they were made outside the ordinary course of trade. In
    fact, the plain language of Ausimont’s response to our supplemental
    questionnaire clearly indicated the company’s expectation that such sales
    would be used, and were appropriate for use, as price-based matches for U.S.
    further-processed sales of imported wet reactor bead. Thus, at no time during
    the information-gathering stage of this review did Ausimont provide any
    evidence, or make any claim, regarding the exclusion of such sales as outside
    the ordinary course of trade.
    
    Id.
     Commerce further stated that it had indicated its intent to use home market wet reactor bead sales
    in its analysis prior to verification, and during verification Ausimont officials discussed in detail
    home market sales selected by Commerce for examination without raising the issue that such sales
    were extraordinary. 
    Id.
     Therefore, “in the absence of information indicating that the relevant home
    market sales were inappropriate for use in our analysis” and finding a statutory preference for
    price-to-price matches, Commerce maintained that the home market wet reactor bead sales were the
    most appropriate basis for establishing NV for comparison with U.S. sales of imported wet reactor
    bead (as further-processed). Id at 49081-49082.
    Commerce then considered the merits using the ordinary-course-of-trade analysis of Canned
    Pineapple Fruit From Thailand, 
    60 Fed. Reg. 29553
     (June 5, 1995) (Final Determ. LTFV), sustained
    sub nom. Thai Pineapple Public Co. v. United States, 
    20 CIT 1312
    , 
    946 F. Supp. 11
     (1996), reversed
    on other grounds,
    187 F.3d 1362
     (Fed. Cir. 1999.) Commerce agreed that the volume and frequency
    of wet reactor bead sales in the home market represented small percentages of total sales but found
    that the absolute amounts were “not insignificant.” Final Results at 49082. Considering that the
    quantities of wet reactor bead sold in the home market were larger on average than granular PTFE
    resin sales, Commerce maintained that (1) total sales and sales volume are not independently
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                         Page 8
    dispositive of whether sales had been made in the ordinary course of trade,4 (2) there was insufficient
    information on the record to determine whether the difference was attributable “to circumstances
    rendering the sales in question extraordinary or unrepresentative of normal sales,” (3) the range of
    wet reactor bead and finished PTFE resin quantities did not indicate that the home market wet
    reactor bead sale quantities were “so unusual as to render such sales inappropriate for our analysis,”
    and (4) “the fact that home market sales of wet reactor bead were made in quantities higher than
    average does not support a conclusion that [NV] based on the price of such sales would be
    unreasonably high.” Id. at 49082. Based on these reasons and its reading of Nachi-Fujikoshi Corp.
    v. United States, 
    16 CIT 606
    , 608-609, 
    798 F. Supp. 716
    , 718-719 (1992), Commerce also rejected
    Ausimont’s contention that the home market wet reactor bead sales were not “usual commercial
    quantities.” 
    Id.
     See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(1)(B).
    Commerce then rejected Ausimont’s comparison of the average selling price of wet reactor
    bead versus that of finished PTFE resin because “wet reactor bead is sold as an intermediate product,
    at prices we would expect to differ from those of finished PTFE resin.” Similarly, Commerce
    rejected the comparison of profits because sales of “certain models” of granular PTFE resin showed
    higher profits than the home market wet reactor bead sales and also because high profits are not
    necessarily indicative of extraordinary sales. Final Results at 49082 (citation omitted).
    Commerce also rejected the argument that there was no “market” for wet reactor bead in Italy
    because the contention “focuse[d] entirely on the immediately prior review, without addressing the
    4
    Final Results at 49082, referencing Certain Welded Carbon Steel Standard Pipes and
    Tubes from India, 
    56 Fed. Reg. 64753
     (Dec. 12, 1991) (Final Rev. Results), and Fresh Atlantic
    Salmon from Chile, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 31411
    , 31423 (June 9, 1998) (Final Determ. LTFV).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                         Page 9
    fact that the respondent ha[d] in fact sold wet reactor bead in the home market in previous segments
    of this proceeding.” 
    Id.,
     referencing Ausimont’s Questionnaire Response of 2/13/95. Considering
    the differences in terms of sale, Commerce agreed with Ausimont that selected exhibits collected
    during verification showed that the terms of sale, for the wet reactor bead sales examined, differed
    from those of certain sales of finished PTFE resin but it stated that it had not examined or collected
    these exhibits for that purpose and that Ausimont officials had not discussed such differences at
    verification. Consequently, Commerce stated that it was “unable to conclude from these documents
    that the terms of sale involving wet reactor bead generally differed significantly from those of other
    sales of finished PTFE resin products or that different terms of sale are not generally applicable to
    all sales.” 
    Id.
     Lastly, Commerce found it significant that the home market sales of PTFE wet reactor
    bead were made to the same customer who also purchased finished PTFE resin products. 
    Id.
     For
    these reasons, Commerce found that Ausimont “failed to explain the facts that establish the
    extraordinary circumstances rendering the claimed sales outside the ordinary course of trade” and
    that “the circumstances that would render home market sales of wet reactor bead outside the ordinary
    course of trade are not present in this review.” 
    Id. at 49082-49083
    .
    In addition, the Final Results rejected Ausimont’s claim that the preliminary results relied
    upon an incorrectly calculated CEP profit ratio. Commerce considered that the claim involved two
    aspects: whether to include imputed expenses in the total expenses used to calculate the ratio, and
    whether to include imputed expenses in the pool of U.S. selling expenses to which Commerce
    applies the ratio. 
    Id.
     The Final Results state that Commerce followed “established” administrative
    practice to calculate the profit rate in accordance with the normal accounting practice which permits
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 10
    deduction of actual booked expenses but not imputed expenses and then apply this rate to U.S.
    selling expenses which include imputed expenses consistent with 19 U.S.C. §§ 1677a(d) and
    1677a(f). Id. at 49083-49084 (citation omitted.) The published margin of dumping was 45.72
    percent for covered entries. Id. at 49084. Ausimont summonsed the government on October 14,
    1998, complaining of this treatment of home market wet reactor bead sales and CEP profit (as well
    as improper rejection of a level-of-trade adjustment, a claim which has since been dropped.)
    Standard of Review
    Jurisdiction is conferred by 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c). The question for the Court is whether the
    administrative determination is “unsupported by substantial evidence on the record or is otherwise
    not in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i) (1994). This standard is considered
    “less deferential” than the arbitrary-and-capricious standard and allows “considerably more generous
    judicial review.” See American Paper Inst., Inc. v. American Elec. Power Serv. Corp., 
    461 U.S. 402
    ,
    412-13 n.7 (1983); Abbott Labs v. Gardner, 
    387 U.S. 136
    , 143 (1967). See also In re Gartside, 
    203 F.3d 1305
    , 1312 (Fed. Cir. 2000). The position is whether a reasonable fact finder could have
    arrived at the agency’s decision in light of “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept
    as adequate to support a conclusion.” Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    305 U.S. 197
    , 229 (1938). See also AK Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    192 F.3d 1367
    , 1371 (Fed. Cir.
    1999). This requires examination of the record as a whole, taking into account evidence that both
    justifies and detracts from an agency’s decision, Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    ,
    487-88 (1951), but “the possibility of drawing two inconsistent conclusions from the evidence does
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                      Page 11
    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).
    Discussion
    I
    Ausimont’s primary claim is that Commerce erred in considering three home market wet
    reactor bead sales as made within the ordinary course of trade (the “contested sales”.)
    A
    As a preliminary matter, the government and DuPont argue it is inappropriate to address the
    merits because Ausimont first raised its claim after the preliminary review results were published.
    They contend that the argument is belated, akin to a failure to exhaust administrative remedies.
    Def’s Resp. at 25-30, referencing United States v. L.A. Tucker Lines, Inc., 
    344 U.S. 33
    , 37 (1952),
    Finnigan Corp. v. International Trade Comm’n, 
    180 F.3d 1354
    , 1362-1363 (Fed Cir. 1999), and
    Sandvik Steel Co. v. United States, 
    164 F.3d 596
    , 599 (Fed. Cir. 1998). The government points to
    the detail of regulations for antidumping duty administrative reviews, pursuant to which information
    must be submitted, verified (as necessary), preliminarily mustered, and briefed with “all arguments
    that continue in the submitter’s view to be relevant to the Secretary’s final determination or final
    results.” 
    Id.,
     quoting 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.309
    (c)(2) (government’s emphasis.) See 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 351.301
    (b)(2), 351.307, 351.221(b)(4) (1997). In addition, the government asserts Commerce’s
    consideration was “hampered” by an inability to develop a fuller factual record on the issue since
    it did not have sufficient time to consider and verify the claim. It argues, furthermore, that
    Ausimont’s “affirmative statements” on the contested sales amounted to “waiv[ing] . . . any claim
    Court No. 98-10-03063                     PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 12
    it might have had that wet reactor bead sales were outside the ordinary course of trade” under the
    logic of Finnigan, supra. Def’s Resp. at 27-30, referencing in addition Murata Mfg. Co., supra, 17
    CIT at 265, 820 F. Supp. at 607, Fujitsu General Ltd. v. United States, 
    19 CIT 359
    , 374, 
    883 F. Supp. 728
    , 739, aff’d 
    88 F.3d 1034
     (Fed. Cir. 1996), and Mukand, Ltd. v. United States, Slip Op. 99-
    35, 
    1999 WL 342461
     (Apr. 9, 1999).
    Be that as it may,5 if the argument here is one of exhaustion, that doctrine forecloses judicial
    review of issues not first presented to the agency for consideration but does not proscribe review
    where an issue was actually considered. United States v. L.A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., supra; Rhone
    Poulenc, Inc. v. United States, 
    13 CIT 239
    , 
    710 F. Supp. 348
     (1989), aff’d 
    899 F.2d 1185
     (1990).
    If the argument is one of timeliness, Ausimont’s raised its points not two weeks but more than three
    months prior to issuance of the Final Results, and there was apparently sufficient time to consider
    data pertaining to not only the instant POR but prior reviews as well. Cf. 19 U.S.C. § 1677m(e)
    (1994). For that matter, the mere provision of comparison market sales data at the fact-gathering
    stage in response to agency request does not, as a consequence, render such sales ordinary. Cf. NTN
    Bearing Corp. of America v. United States, 
    19 CIT 1221
    , 1229, 
    905 F. Supp. 1083
    , 1090-91 (1995).
    A claimant must prove the circumstances which render sales extraordinary, e.g. Koyo Seiko Co., Ltd.
    5
    Finnigan found appellate-level argument favoring a particular construction of a patent
    claim had not been “specifically” asserted to the International Trade Commission and was therefore
    waived in the wake of an administrative law judge’s determination. Mukand sustained Commerce’s
    disregard of untimely “statements of fact in support of allegations”. Fujitsu justified rejecting a
    level-of-trade-adjustment claim not only because it was untimely raised, two weeks prior to a hearing
    thereon, but also because the questionnaire had specifically requested a statement of such claim (if
    any) and provision of supporting documentation therefor. The respondent had provided neither. See
    Television Receivers, Monochrome and Color, From Japan, 
    56 Fed. Reg. 5392
    , 5392 at Comment
    17 (Feb. 11, 1991) (Final Rev. Results).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                    PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 13
    v. United States, 
    20 CIT 772
    , 783-84, 
    932 F. Supp. 1488
    , 1497-98, (1996); Nachi-Fujikoshi Corp.,
    supra, 16 CIT at 608-609, 
    798 F. Supp. at 718-719
    , and executing volte face certainly would not
    alleviate the burden of persuasion, however there is no presumption that sales are ordinary, see
    Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties, 
    62 Fed. Reg. 27296
    , 27299 (May 19, 1997) (Final
    Rule), and facts might speak for themselves. Further imperatives followed Ausimont’s first
    questionnaire response6, but in the end Commerce had a duty, as implied in the matching instructions
    sent to Ausimont with the first questionnaire, to “consider only those sales in the comparison market
    that are . . . made under conditions and practices that, for a reasonable period of time prior to the date
    of sale of the subject merchandise, have been normal for sales of the foreign like product.” Letter
    with Questionnaire from Commerce to Ausimont of 9/24/97 app. I at 10 (PDoc 3, Fiche 4, Fr. 19).
    See Def’s PubApp 3, app. I at 10. Otherwise, authority to exclude sales on Commerce’s own
    initiative is lacking.
    B
    For the POR, U.S. sales of granular PTFE resin comprised [           ] percent by volume, [      ]
    percent by value, and [     ] percent by number of transactions ([      ] sales out of [     ] total sales
    of subject merchandise and foreign like product), whereas the contested sales comprised 2.0
    percent of home market sales by volume, 1.7 percent by value, and 0.4 percent by number of
    6
    Inter alia, Ausimont was directed to “make the following revisions to the U.S. and
    comparison market sales databases”, which included instruction to “Confirm,” “Include,” “Assume,”
    “continue to report” et cetera, and also “Please note that the [foregoing] data is also required in the
    U.S. and comparison market sales listings for wet reactor bead products in both markets. Ensure that
    you have provided home market sales of all products that can be matched to reactor bead that is
    further manufactured in the United States . . . .” Letter with Supplemental Questionnaire from
    Commerce to Ausimont of 2/23/98 (PDoc 18, Fiche 8, Frs. 43-44; CDoc 4, Fiche 19, Frs. 59-60)
    (highlighting added). See Def’s ConfApp 2 (Section A, pp. 2-3).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 14
    transactions. The contested sales were sold to one of Ausimont’s customers, all of whom were
    “fabricators” at the time, on a “pending” order basis which gave Ausimont discretion to cancel if an
    order could not be filled by a specified target date. By contrast, there were [ ] home-market sales
    of granular PTFE resin purchased by [      ] customers with quantities and prices subject to change
    until shipment or, occasionally, on an “open order” basis as to quantity and price terms, meaning that
    the customer intends to order a particular product in the future.7 The contested sales averaged over
    five times the quantity, 21.3 percent lower prices, and nearly two times higher profits, than average
    sales of granular PTFE resin, and accounted for more than 72 percent of the margin of dumping,
    according to Ausimont.
    1. The Plaintiffs’ Arguments.
    Ausimont contends Commerce did not properly consider the “totality of the circumstances”
    of the contested sales on volume, frequency, prices, quantities, profits, market, terms and conditions,
    and customers, and in light of Thai Pineapple Public Co. v. United States, 
    20 CIT 1312
    , 
    946 F. Supp. 11
     (1996).8 Pls’ Br. at 12-14, 33, referencing Pls’ ConfApps 2, 5, 6. Specifically, it argues
    7
    QR 1 at A-10-11 (PDoc 13, Fiche 5, Frs. 20-21; CDoc 1, Fiche 13, Frs. 20-21).
    8
    In Thai Pineapple Public Co. v. United States, 
    20 CIT 1312
    , 
    946 F. Supp. 11
     (1996), rev’d
    on other grounds, 
    187 F.3d 1362
     (Fed. Cir. 1999), a single sale comprising 0.01 percent by volume
    of the respondent’s foreign market database was compared to two United States sales amounting to
    one percent by volume of the U.S. sales database. The comparison accounted for 90 percent of the
    preliminary dumping margin. Commerce considering the record for volume, frequency, quantity,
    price, profits, market demand, number and type of customers, and terms of sale, and concluded that
    except for type of customer and terms of sale the facts supported exclusion. See 20 CIT at 1315-
    1316, 946 F. Supp. at 16. Ausimont points out that Commerce has also recognized that overrun sale
    analysis (e.g., volume, price, profit, physical differences, end-uses, number of customers,) is useful
    in evaluating non-overrun sales. Pls’ Supp. Mem. at 8. See Laclede Steel Co. v. United States, 
    19 CIT 1076
     (1995); Certain Cold-Rolled and Corrosion-Resistant Carbon Steel Flat Products From
    Korea, 
    64 Fed. Reg. 12927
    , 12941 (Mar. 16, 1999) (Final Rev. Results).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 15
    Commerce should have (1) considered wet reactor bead distinct from granular PTFE resin, since
    both are types of PTFE and wet reactor bead is not a model of granular PTFE resin, (2) accorded
    heavier weight to volume and frequency, (3) compared quantities, profits and prices based on
    aggregate averages, and (4) considered in a fuller light the “market” for wet reactor bead in Italy and
    the contested sales’ different terms of trade and usage as compared with granular PTFE resin.
    Ausimont argues that the ordinary-course-of-trade statute, 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (15), requires
    Commerce to examine “the conditions and practices which . . . have been normal in the trade under
    consideration with respect to merchandise of the same class or kind” and it argues the proper
    comparison here is between two types of PTFE – wet reactor bead and granular PTFE resin–and not
    between wet reactor bead and certain “models” of granular PTFE resin.9 Pls’ Supp. Mem. at 4,
    referencing Certain Welded Carbon Steel Standard Pipes and Tubes from India, 
    56 Fed. Reg. 64753
    (Dec. 12, 1991) (Final Rev. Results) (“Pipes From India”).10 Accord Mantex Inc. v, United States,
    
    17 CIT 1385
    , 1404, 
    841 F. Supp. 1290
    , 1306 (1993). It states Commerce has distinguished clinker
    9
    The antidumping duty order originally circumscribed only “granular PTFE resin.” See
    Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy, 
    53 Fed. Reg. 26096
     (July 11, 1988) (Final
    Determ. LTFV). All models thereof were determined to constitute a single class or kind of
    merchandise.
    10
    Pipes From India covered “shipments of welded carbon steel pipes and tubes with an
    outside diameter of 0.375 inch or more but not over 16 inches.” 56 Fed. Reg. at 64753. The issue
    was whether sales in India of pipe meeting American Society for Testing Materials specification A-
    120 (“ASTM pipe”) were within the ordinary course of trade. After comparing differences between
    ASTM pipe and Indian Standard IS-1239 pipe based on (1) volume, (2) number of buyers, (3)
    standards and product use, (4) price, (5) profit, and (6) production runs (i.e. overruns or seconds),
    Commerce determined the ASTM pipe sales to have been outside the ordinary course of trade.
    Commerce also applied difference-in-merchandise adjustments to the several “such or similar”
    categories of IS pipe in accordance with 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(4)(C). See Certain Welded Carbon
    Steel Standard Pipes From India, 
    56 Fed. Reg. 26650
    , 26651 (June 10, 1991) (Preliminary Results).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                      PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 16
    and cement as separate foreign like products, see Calcium Aluminate Cement, Cement Clinker and
    Flux From France, 
    59 Fed. Reg. 14136
    , 14141 (Mar. 25, 1994) (Final Determ. LTFV), and it argues
    that wet reactor bead is to granular PTFE resin as clinker is to cement. Pls’ Supp. Mem. at 5-9.
    On its second point, Ausimont argues volume and frequency are necessary precursors to
    “heightened scrutiny” of other ordinary-course-of-trade factors and therefore are, or should be,
    accorded “great weight” in the analysis. Pls’ Br. at 12-14 referencing CEMEX S.A. v. United States,
    
    19 CIT 587
    , 589-93 (1995), aff’d after remand results sustained 
    133 F.3d 897
    , 903 (Fed. Cir. 1998)
    and Mantex Inc. v. United States, supra, 17 CIT at 1404, 841 F. Supp. at 1306 (1993).11            Out of
    [            ] kilograms of foreign like product sold in Italy, the absolute amount of the contested sales
    was [           ] kilograms. Ausimont argues that even this overstates because wet reactor bead was
    sold in 700-kilogram “bags” containing 30 percent water, useless “initiator residues,” and organic
    contaminants, whereas granular PTFE resin is packed dry and sold in drums weighing at most 45
    kilograms. Pls’ Br. at 14. Cf. note 26, infra. The volume and frequency of the contested sales were
    determined small, but “not insignificant” because “the quantities involved in these sales are in fact
    larger on average than for other sales.” Final Results at 49082. Ausimont argues that this was
    arbitrary since it offers no indication of what standard was applied, and for that matter whatever
    standard was used was not applied consistently since Commerce on its own initiative and without
    explanation determined seven home market sales of a model of granular PTFE resin were outside
    11
    CEMEX S.A. v. United States, 
    19 CIT 587
    , (1995), aff’d after remand results sustained
    
    133 F.3d 897
     (Fed. Cir. 1998) sustained the determination that home market sales of certain types
    of cement were extraordinary based on analysis of (1) volume, (2) sales patterns, (3) home market
    demand,(4) shipping arrangements and allocation of shipping costs, (5) profitability, and (6)
    corporate image, i.e. the “promotional quality” of the sales. Mantex sustained Pipes From India.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 17
    the ordinary course of trade although the absolute quantity of these sales, sold to three customers
    in Italy, was [       ] kilograms.12 The only agency determination to reject an ordinary course of
    trade claim based on the “significance” of an absolute volume amount, according to Ausimont, was
    Fresh Atlantic Salmon From Chile, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 31411
    , 31423 (June 9, 1998) (Final Determ. LTFV)
    (“Fresh Atlantic Salmon”), which also determined those sales to have been “regularly sold
    throughout” the period of investigation.13 Ausimont states it may therefore be inferred that their
    frequency was “not small,” in contrast to the determination on that issue here, and it notes that
    neither the government nor DuPont pointed to a proceeding in which an ordinary course of trade
    claim was rejected in the presence of both small volume and small frequency. Ausimont states that
    Commerce has considered small volume and frequency arguably dispositive in their own right for
    determining sales extraordinary,14 and while Ausimont concedes that other considerations may
    12
    Pls’ Rep. at 20. See line 116 of Commerce’s Final AD Administrative Review computer
    program log which reads “IF TYPEH=. OR FILLERH=. ORFILLPCTH=. OR GRADEH=. THEN
    OUTPUT OFFSPECH;”. This apparently served to output seven sales of product code [                    ]
    as outside the ordinary course of trade. None of the parties address the reason why. Total volume
    and frequency of product code [           ] were greater than the contested sales, i.e. 3.0% and 0.9%
    of total merchandise sold (excluding contested sales). The average quantity of product code
    [        ] was 64% of the average quantity of the contested sales.
    13
    See Fresh Atlantic Salmon, supra, 63 Fed. Reg. at 31423 (“While sales of vacuum-packed
    fillets may represent a small percentage of total sales, the absolute amount of these sales [i.e. several
    thousand kilograms] is not insignificant”.)
    14
    Following briefing, Ausimont submitted reference to Gray Portland Cement and Clinker
    from Mexico, 
    65 Fed. Reg. 13943
     (Mar. 15, 2000) (Final Rev. Results) as Commerce’s recent
    treatment of the matter, along with a motion to submit. The government and DuPont argued against
    such submission and in addition addressed its substantive impact. Commerce therein opined that
    examination of the volume and frequency of cement produced as Type V LA alone indicated that
    home market sales had been “unusual.” See Decision Memorandum, A-201-802, ARP 97-98 (Mar.
    15, 2000), available at http://ia.ita.doc.gov/frn/summary/2000mar.htm. The parties’ assistance on
    agency treatment of frequency and volume is helpful, and the motion to submit is therefore granted.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 18
    outweigh the presence of infrequent and low-volume sales, it maintains that none were present in
    the Final Results.
    On its third point, Ausimont argues that the government’s rejection of its contention as
    “incomplete explanation” amounts to mere rationalization because Thai Pineapple Public Co. and
    the underlying determination looked only to variable differentiation. Pls’ Br. at 15; Pls’ Rep. at 15,
    18. Ausimont argues Commerce offered insufficient or conflicting explanations to ignore or reject
    comparisons of the contested sales to granular PTFE resin sales based on quantity, price, and profit.
    It argues that the plain meaning of “normal” in the context of “merchandise of the same class or
    kind” in 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (15) is “average” or “typical,” and it points out that Commerce has
    typically examined ordinary-course-of-trade-claims by reference, inter alia, to average aggregate
    quantifiable variables.15 Ausimont therefore argues that only proof of quantities “significantly
    15
    See Pls’ Br. at 12, 27-29 referencing CEMEX, supra; Mantex, supra. See also Pls’ Supp.
    Mem. at 11-15, referencing Laclede Steel Co. v. United States, 
    18 CIT 965
    , 968 (1994) on remand,
    supra, 19 CIT at 1080 (1995); Gray Portland Cement and Cement Clinker From Mexico, 
    64 Fed. Reg. 13148
    , 13156 (Mar. 17, 1999) (Final Rev. Results) (see Aug. 31, 1998 Memoranda at 4);
    Certain Circular Welded Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes From Thailand, 
    61 Fed. Reg. 1328
     (Jan. 19,
    1996) (Final Rev. Results); Canned Pineapple Fruit From Thailand, 
    supra,
     
    60 Fed. Reg. 29553
    ;
    Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Japan, 
    58 Fed. Reg. 50343
    , 50345 (Sep. 27, 1993)
    (Final Rev. Results); Sulfur Dyes, Including Sulfur Vat Dyes, From The United Kingdom, 
    58 Fed. Reg. 3253
    , 3256 (Jan. 8, 1993) (Final Determ. LTVF); Circular Welded Non-Alloy Steel Pipe From
    the Republic of Korea, 
    57 Fed. Reg. 42942
    , 42948 (Sep. 17, 1992) (Final Determ. LTFV). Ausimont
    asserts that Commerce previously gave notice of a preference for aggregate data for determining CV.
    Pls’ Supp. Mem. at 15, referencing Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties, supra, 62 Fed. Reg.
    at 27359:
    The use of aggregate data results in a reasonable and practical measure of
    profit that the Department can apply consistently in each case. By contrast,
    a method based on varied groupings of foreign like products, each defined by
    a minimum set of matching criteria shaped with a particular model of the
    subject merchandise[,] would add an additional layer of complexity without
    generating more accurate results.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 19
    higher,”16 prices “significantly lower,”17 and profits “much higher,”18 than those of the “vast
    majority” of granular PTFE resin sales, is all that should have been required to show that the
    contested sales were not made in the ordinary course of trade.
    Ausimont further argues that the determinations in the Final Results on volume and quantity
    are inherently contradictory: the determination that the volume of the contested sales was “not
    insignificant” rests on the determination that their quantities were “larger on average than for other
    sales,” yet quantities were determined not “so unusual as to render such sales inappropriate for our
    16
    The contested sales weighed [                                                          ]
    (including the useless fluid and initiator residues) and averaged five times the average weight of
    granular PTFE resin sales. 13 sales of merchandise, about 1.8%, were in greater quantities than
    the average quantity of the contested sales, three of those were in greater quantities than two of
    the contested sales, and 46 sales, about 6.3%, were in greater quantities than the smallest
    contested sale, which would have been larger but for Ausimont’s cancellation of part of the order.
    See Pls’ Br. at 37.
    17
    The average gross unit price of the contested sales was 21.3% lower than average home
    market PTFE granular resin sales. See id. at 30. Ausimont points out that during the POR there were
    only six other sales of the foreign like product in the home market with lower selling prices than
    the average gross unit price of the contested sales, and of those sales, Commerce, on its own
    initiative, excluded five as “off-spec product” and outside the ordinary course of trade, leaving only
    one with higher pricing than any sale of wet reactor bead. Id. at 31, referencing Pls’ ConfApp 7;
    Pls’ Rep. at 44-45. Eliminating these sales, Ausimont asserts that the average “normal” gross unit
    price on granular PTFE resin was 37% greater than the average gross unit price of the contested
    sales.
    18
    Ausimont argues that Commerce’s observation that [          ] “models” of PTFE granular
    resin had higher gross profit margins than those of the contested sales misses the point, since those
    model sales comprised only [ ]% of total sales volume whereas [ ]% had lower gross profit
    margins. Ausimont contends that profits were “abnormally” high by either a gross or net profit
    comparison: gross profit on the contested sales as a percentage of the total cost of production was
    over [ ]% but was under [ ]% for home market sales of PTFE granular resin; regarding net profit,
    the difference was [ ]% versus [ ]%. Pls’ Br. at 26-27, referencing Pls’ ConfApp 4 at 6 and Pls’
    ConfApp B. On a net profit basis, Ausimont contends only [ ] models of PTFE granular resin had
    “slightly higher” profit percentages than the contested sales, and those models comprised only
    [ ]% of the total sales of the merchandise by volume. Id. at 29. See Pls’ ConApp B.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 20
    analysis” because of the range of “individual sales of both wet reactor bead and finished PTFE
    resin.” See Final Results at 49082. Ausimont argues “Commerce cannot have it both ways:” if the
    absolute amount of the reactor bead sold is significant, then so is the fact that the average quantity
    of the contested sales is five times higher than that of granular PTFE resin sales, but if it is not
    significant that the average quantity of the contested sales is five times higher, then neither are their
    absolute amounts. Pls’ Supp. Mem. at 17. Ausimont further argues that the reason given for
    rejecting the comparison of average prices in Italy for wet reactor bead and granular PTFE resin
    created an “impossible hurdle,”19 i.e. , there were no “normal” home market sales of wet reactor bead
    with which the prices of the contested sales could be compared, and was implicitly at odds with the
    determination in the circumvention proceeding that the value added in the U.S. by further processing
    of wet reactor bead into granular PTFE resin is “small.” Furthermore, Ausimont argues that to
    suggest that differences in prices and quantities are attributable solely to the fact that wet reactor
    bead is an intermediate product is to presume that it should be sold in higher quantities and at lower
    prices than those of the further-manufactured product. Ausimont argues quantities five times
    higher and prices 21.3 percent lower cannot be attributed solely to this “determination,” because
    if the argument was true, it would only exacerbate the disparity in profits,20 since it would likewise
    19
    Pls’ Br. at 32, referencing NEC Home Electronics Ltd. v. United States, 
    22 CIT 167
    , 
    3 F. Supp. 2d 1451
     (1998) (requiring proof of sales when there were no such sales was unreasonable and
    abuse of discretion) and Olympic Adhesives, Inc. v. United States, 
    899 F.2d 1565
    , 1573 (Fed. Cir.
    1990) (rejecting use of best information available in situation “where submitter cannot produce data
    because no such data ever existed”.)
    20
    “[A] profit level comparison is probative of the economic reality” of whether sales were
    within or without the ordinary course of trade. Mantex, supra, 17 CIT at 1406, 841 F. Supp. at 1308.
    Therefore “the disparity in profit margins is indicative of sales that were not in the ordinary course
    of trade.” CEMEX, supra, 
    133 F.3d at 901
    .
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                       Page 21
    have to presume profit equality. Pls’ Supp. Rep at 10-11. Ausimont points out that since the
    argument presumes a higher per sale quantity of wet reactor bead, it cannot be said that the
    “absolute” amount of wet reactor bead sold was therefore a fact of significance in the determination
    on volume and frequency. In the event, Ausimont contends, the determinations on price, quantity,
    frequency, and volume would become irrelevant, neither for its position nor held against it for lack
    of proof. Pls’ Supp. Mem. at 10-11, referencing Certain Circular Welded Carbon Steel Pipes and
    Tubes From Thailand, 
    supra,
     61 Fed. Reg. at 1331 (“not a requirement that different price and profit
    levels be demonstrated in order for sales to be determined outside the ordinary course of trade.”)
    Commerce concluded there was a “market” in Italy for wet reactor bead “because Ausimont
    has in fact made sales in prior segments of this proceeding.” Ausimont contends this is incorrect for
    several reasons. First, wet reactor bead is not listed as a product offered for sale on any of
    Ausimont’s sales literature. Second, it is not “normally” sold to anyone other than Ausimont USA.
    Third, the contested sales were purchased by only one of [         ] customers, all of whom were
    previously verified as being “fabricators” who further processed granular PTFE resin into molded
    shapes and mechanical parts,21 i.e., not in the business of making granular PTFE resin from wet raw
    polymer. Fourth, the uses of wet reactor bead are “extremely limited,” since unlike granular PTFE
    resin it cannot be directly compression molded into marketable shapes or forms.22 Fifth, sales cannot
    21
    See Pls’ Supp. Mem at 8, citing Circumvention Determination, supra, 
    58 Fed. Reg. 26100
    .
    22
    Ausimont argues Mantex’s treatment of usage is instructive: Indian Standard (“IS) pipe
    sold in large numbers in India and in small numbers in the United States, whereas pipe manufactured
    according to the American Society for Testing and Materials (“ASTM”) standards sold in small
    numbers in the India and in greater numbers in the United States. ASTM pipe was unusual in the
    Indian market, therefore its uses in India were limited, therefore a fortiori demand in India would
    (continued...)
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 22
    be “representative” of the home market if there is no “market,” and evidence of insignificant demand
    ought to be significant in the determination of that issue. Id. at 16-17, citing Thai Pineapple Public
    Co., 20 CIT at 1314, 946 F. Supp. at 15; Mantex, 17 CIT at 1405, 841 F. Supp. at 1307. Ausimont
    contends that the Final Results stand in “stark contrast” to the circumvention investigation (in which
    Commerce determined two sales of wet reactor bead in Italy constituted “virtually no market”)23
    and the reality of this POR, for which Commerce verified that there had been no home market sales
    22
    (...continued)
    have been marginal. 17 CIT at 1405, 841 F. Supp. at 1307.
    23
    Circumvention Determination, 58 Fed. Reg. at 26110. See Pls’ Br. at 19. Ausimont also
    moves to supplement the administrative record, contending that Commerce relied on evidence from
    such prior proceedings to justify its conclusions but without considering the totality of that evidence
    which shows that there had been no market for wet reactor bead in the periods preceding the instant
    POR. Pls’ Br. at 22, citing F. Lli De Cecco Di Filippo Fara San Martino v. United States, 
    21 CIT 1124
    , 1126-27, 
    980 F. Supp. 485
    , 487 (1997) (information was part of an agency record if it “was
    in front of [Commerce] during the investigation, regardless of whether or not [Commerce] chose to
    ignore it”); Floral Trade Council of Davis, California v. United States, 
    13 CIT 242
    , 243, 
    709 F. Supp. 229
    , 230 (1989) (“those documents at the agency which become sufficiently intertwined with
    the relevant inquiry are part of the record”). Ausimont contends that, in making its findings for the
    Final Results, Commerce ignored the fact that over the course of five consecutive years, since 1993
    there had been only five sales of wet reactor bead to unaffiliated customers: two in the 1993-1994
    period (the review in which Commerce determined that there was “virtually no market for wet
    reactor bead” and used CV therefor), and the three in this 1996-1997 POR. Id. at 23-24,
    referencing Pls’ ConfApp A-1 and A-2. Ausimont argues Commerce also ignored Ausimont’s report
    for that review on the average profit on home market sales of the class or kind of merchandise, which
    Commerce had requested and to which Ausimont had responded: “sales of [wet] reactor bead on the
    open market are not significant and do not reflect current market conditions” and that those “sales
    . . . were less than 1% of the total production,” which Commerce accepted. Id. referencing Pls’
    ConfApp A-2. Ausimont argues Commerce here also ignored a printout for the 1994-1995 review
    period from the amended final determination disclosure materials listing the weighted-average home
    market values of all “models” of foreign like product showing no sales of wet reactor bead during
    that period. See Pls’ ConfApp A-2. The Court has considered the government’s and DuPont’s
    opposition, and concludes that the Final Results opened the door to this inquiry and that therefore
    allowing Ausimont’s motion would be proper and in accordance with 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(2)(A)(i),
    Floral Trade Counsel and F.LlI De Cecco Di Filippo Fara San Martino. Since this is a “segment”
    of a “proceeding,” it is arguable that the information is part of “the record” in any event.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                         Page 23
    during the 1995-1996 period. Pls’ Br. at 18; Pls’ Supp. Mem. at 9-10. Ausimont also emphasizes
    that Commerce agreed the volume and frequency of the contested sales were small in comparison
    with total sales of merchandise and that even where demand has been shown to exist sales have been
    excluded when the market was “so” small and the volume of sales “very” low.24
    Regarding the terms and conditions of sale, the Final Results concluded that the verification
    documents did not indicate that the terms and conditions for the contested sales “generally differed
    significantly” from sales of granular PTFE resin “or that different terms [and conditions] of sale are
    not generally applicable to all sales.” Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 49082. Ausimont points out
    that wet reactor bead was neither described in any of the product brochures25 nor listed or otherwise
    offered as a product for sale, there were no standard prices for wet reactor bead, and the prices of the
    contested sales were separately negotiated and reflect the dry weight sold.26 Furthermore, sales
    canceled before invoice may be indicative of sales outside the ordinary course of trade, see Murata
    Mfg. Co., supra, 17 CIT at 263, 820 F. Supp. at 606 (1993),27 and Ausimont contends the
    documentation corroborates that the contested sales were on a “pending order” basis since at the
    bottom of the sales confirmation for OBS 81 is typewritten “Si può spedire OK” (translated thereon
    “It can be delivered”) and Ausimont also cancelled three of the four orders in OBS 376 before
    24
    See, e.g., Gray Portland Cement and Clinker From Mexico, supra, 64 Fed. Reg. at 13157.
    25
    See QR 1 at A-13 (PD 13, Fiche 5, Frs. 20-21; CDoc 1, Fiche 13, Frs. 20-21).
    26
    See id. at A-6 (PD 13, Fiche 5, Fr. 16; CD 1, Fiche 13, Fr. 16). See also Exhibit B-4 to
    Verification Memorandum dated 5/4/98, OBS 376 (CDoc Ex. B-4, Fiche 32, Frs. 5, 91) (indicating
    different weights for shipping and invoicing purposes.)
    27
    See also NSK Ltd. v. United States, 
    190 F.3d 1321
     (Fed. Cir. 1999) (different process of
    ordering or shipping are relevant to ordinary-course-of-trade inquiry.)
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 24
    invoice. See Pls’ Conf. Br. at 39-40 and attachment C thereto (“Agreed Supplement to the
    Record”); Pls’ Conf. Rep. at 49-51 and attachment.           See also Exhibit B-4 to Verification
    Memorandum dated 5/4/98, OBS 81 (CDoc Ex. B-4, Fiche 32, Fr. 12). Ausimont contends that the
    documentation of separately negotiated prices, orders canceled before invoicing, and the
    characterization and processing of orders as “pending” therefore show that the contested sales
    differed significantly from those of granular PTFE resin sales and were therefore unusual.
    Alternatively, Ausimont contends the contested sales should be excluded from NV as not
    sold in the “usual commercial quantities”28 because their average quantity was [          ] kilograms
    whereas the mean average quantity of other merchandise sold during the POI was [          ] kilograms.
    Pls’ Br. at 41, referencing Nachi-Fuijikoshi Corp., supra, 
    16 CIT 606
    , 
    798 F. Supp. 716
    .
    2. The Defendant’s and Defendant-Intervenor’s Arguments.
    The government responds that: (1) after passage of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act, Pub.
    L. 103-465, 
    108 Stat. 4809
     (1994) (“URAA”), Commerce retained discretion to determine whether
    a sale is within or without the ordinary course of trade,29 (2) wet reactor bead is properly subject to
    the antidumping order against granular PTFE resin, (3) Commerce was “well aware” of the
    differences between wet reactor bead and granular resin, and (4) Ausimont provided data on home
    market sales of wet reactor bead in response to Commerce’s specific request to provide the home
    28
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (17) (1994) defines “usual commercial quantities” for “any case in which
    the subject merchandise is sold in the market under consideration at different prices for different
    quantities” to mean “the quantities in which such merchandise is there sold at the price or prices for
    one quantity in an aggregate volume which is greater than the aggregate volume sold at the price or
    prices for any other quantity.”
    29
    Def’s Resp. at 25, stating accord Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Inc. v. United States, 
    22 CIT 541
    , 568, 
    15 F. Supp.2d 807
    , 830 (1998).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                         Page 25
    market products and sales believed to be the “most appropriate” for comparison with imported wet
    reactor bead. Therefore, the government states, Commerce determined that the contested sales were
    an appropriate foreign like product for constructing export price sales of wet reactor bead. Def’s
    Resp. at 20-25, 33-34; Def’s Supp. Mem. at 9; DuPont’s Resp. at 7-8. See QR 1 at Ex. B-2 (PDoc
    13, Fiche 5, Fr. 94; CDoc 1, Fiche 15, Fr. 52); Letter enclosing updated U.S. and home market
    databases from Ausimont to Commerce of 12/19/97 at Ex. 1 (CDoc 3; Fiche 19, Fr. 38); Verification
    Memorandum dated 5/4/98 at Ex. A-3-1 (CDoc Ex. A-3-1; Fiche 26, Fr. 49). See also DuPont’s
    ConApps 4, 5, 6.
    As a general matter, the government maintains that there was no departure from agency
    practice in examination of the conditions and practices of the contested sales, that even if there were,
    Commerce is relieved of explaining any departure by virtue of Allied-Signal Aerospace Co. v. United
    States, 
    28 F.3d 1188
     (Fed. Cir. 1994),30 and that Ausimont only recited differences between the
    contested sales and PTFE granular resin sales but did not provide a “complete explanation of the
    facts which establish the extraordinary circumstances rendering particular sales outside the ordinary
    course of trade.” Def’s Resp. at 31-32, quoting NTN Bearing Corp. of America, supra, 19 CIT at
    1229, 905 F. Supp. at 1090-91. DuPont adds that Ausimont has not met the “heavy” burden of proof
    for disregarding sales which was “set forth” in Koyo Seiko Co., Ltd. v. United States, supra, 20 CIT
    at 783-84, 
    932 F. Supp. at 1497-98
     (claim that certain sales consisted of samples or obsolete product
    insufficiently substantiated by evidence of record,) and it points out that in Mantex there was an
    30
    Def’s Resp. at 31. The appellate court in Allied-Signal viewed the “nature” of “best
    information available” determinations as “discretionary, case-by-case” and concluded “Commerce
    is obligated only to use a methodology consistent with its statutory authority, and it is not required
    to supply a ‘reasoned analysis’ justifying its adoption.” 
    28 F.3d at 1191
    .
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 26
    “explanation” for the aberrational nature of the sales, namely the fact that the ASTM type pipe sold
    in India was packed for export and unstamped, lending credence to finding that those sales consisted
    of production overruns or returns on export sales. DuPont’s Resp. at 16-17, 33; DuPont’s Supp.
    Resp. at 6-7. Compare Mantex, supra, with Certain Circular Welded Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes
    From Thailand, 
    supra,
     61 Fed. Reg. at 1331. See also Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered
    Roller Bearings) and Parts Thereof From France et al., 
    58 Fed. Reg. 39729
     (July 26, 1993) (Final
    Rev. Results) (“Antifriction Bearings From France”).31
    The government and DuPont argue that neither CEMEX nor Mantex compels exclusion of
    low-volume and infrequent sales, that in fact there are “numerous” instances where infrequent and
    low volume sales were considered ordinary, including Murata Mfg. Co., supra, NTN Bearing Corp.
    of America, supra, and NSK Ltd. v. United States, 
    17 CIT 590
    , 596-97, 
    825 F. Supp. 315
    , 321
    (1993). The government asserts that there is no authority for the proposition that volume and
    frequency are to be accorded “great weight” in ordinary-course-of-trade analyses, or that frequency
    and volume are determinative “in and of themselves” (despite Gray Portland Cement and Clinker
    from Mexico, supra, 
    65 Fed. Reg. 13943
    ), and that the Final Results are in accordance with whatever
    31
    In Antifriction Bearings From France, Commerce opined:
    Although respondent provided price comparison data for all of its sample and
    prototype sales, this data merely proves that such sales were made in smaller
    quantities at higher prices. Respondent has provided no information
    regarding the circumstances surrounding the sales alleged to be outside the
    ordinary course of trade. Therefore, FAG-Germany’s data provides
    insufficient evidence in and of itself for proving that sample sales were made
    outside the ordinary course of trade.
    58 Fed. Reg. at 39775
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                         Page 27
    administrative practice may be gleaned from this area, including Fresh Atlantic Salmon. See Def’s
    Resp. at 31-32, 37-38. DuPont contends that the volume of the contested sales was not insignificant,
    compared to “sales of many other PTFE products” and it points out that Fresh Atlantic Salmon
    involved the “much smaller absolute quantity” of only several thousand kilograms. DuPont’s Resp.
    at 18-21. “Without more, Commerce could not conclude, as plaintiff would have liked, that the
    sizeable absolute amount of the PTFE reactor bead sales was comparable to a lesser amount of
    granular PTFE resin sales.” Id. at 19.32
    The government asserts that Commerce relies on both averaging and examination of ranges
    in analyzing ordinary course of trade claims, and that a party’s preference for comparing aggregate
    averages does not mean that a determination “based on ranges” is unsupported by substantial
    evidence.33 Def’s Supp. Mem. at 15, referencing Eckstrom Indus. Inc. v. United States, 23 CIT ___,
    32
    Ausimont responds that “several thousand kilograms” of fish fillets “probably is a lot of
    fish,” at the same time maintaining that [ ] thousand kilograms of wet reactor bead sold in Italy was
    insignificant when compared to all granular resin sales. Pls’ Rep. at 19.
    33
    See Def’s Supp. Mem. at 14-15, referencing Steel Wire Rod From Canada, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 9182
    , 9186 (Feb. 24, 1998) (Final Determ. LTFV) (“the price of the sale at issue is near the midpoint
    of the price range of Stelco’s home market sales, and there is no evidence that the price was
    aberrational”); Coated Groundwood Paper From France, 
    56 Fed. Reg. 56380
    , 56383 (Nov. 4, 1991)
    (Final Determ. LTFV) (“because the quantities of these sales were within the typical range, and
    because there is no reason to believe that this was not the normal commercial practice for these sales
    prior to the POI, we do not believe that these sales fall outside the ordinary course of trade”);
    Industrial Phosphoric Acid From Israel, 
    52 Fed. Reg. 25440
    , 25443 (July 7, 1987) (Final Determ.
    LTFV) (“The sales price falls within the range of prices paid by other customers in the home market
    and, thus, we have included this sale in our foreign market value calculations.”) See also DuPont’s
    Supp. Mem at 3-4, referencing inter alia Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered Roller
    Bearings) and Parts Thereof From France, et al., 
    63 Fed. Reg. 33320
    , 33344 (June 18, 1998) (Final
    Rev. Results) (“regard[ing] NTN’s abnormally high-profit sales, the presence of profits higher than
    those of other sales does not necessarily place the sales outside the ordinary course of trade”); Sulfur
    Dyes, Including Sulfur Vat Dyes, From The United Kingdom, supra, 58 Fed. Reg. at 3256 (“sale at
    a greater quantity and lower price than other sales to the same customer [and] . . . out of line with
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 28
    ___, 
    70 F. Supp.2d 1360
    , 1363-64 (1999) (recently reversed, see ___ F.3d ___, 
    2001 WL 737334
    (Fed.Cir. 2001). Averaging analysis would be “immaterial” here, the government contends, because
    of Consolo v. Federal Maritime Comm’n, supra, 
    383 U.S. at 620
     (possibility of drawing inconsistent
    conclusions from the same evidence does not necessarily render agency determinations unsupported
    by substantial evidence.) See Def’s Resp. at 33-34.
    The government demurs that it would be incorrect to state that Commerce’s practice is to
    analyze ordinary course of trade claims by comparison to merchandise within the same “such or
    similar”34 or “foreign like product” categories.35 DuPont distinguishes Calcium Aluminate Cement,
    Cement Clinker and Flux From France, supra, and the like as merely concerned with comparison
    of sales for matching purposes in the context of the “hierarchical rules” of 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (16) for
    determining “foreign like product” or “such or similar merchandise” which favor “[t]he subject
    merchandise and other merchandise which is identical in physical characteristics with, and that was
    prices and quantities of the vast majority of respondents’ other sales transactions in the home
    market”,) and Granular Polytetrafluoroethylene Resin From Japan, supra 58 Fed. Reg. at 50345
    (“extremely small quantities of [evaluation samples] at prices substantially higher than the prices of
    the vast majority of sales reported” excluded.)
    34
    The URAA replaced “such or similar merchandise” with “foreign like product.” Compare
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (16) (1988) with 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (16) (1994).
    35
    Def’s Supp. Resp. at 11, referencing Gray Portland Cement and Clinker From Mexico,
    
    62 Fed. Reg. 17581
    , 17585-86 (Apr. 10, 1997) (Final Rev. Results) (“In the second review, the
    Department’s determination that CEMEX’s Type II and V sales were outside the ordinary course of
    trade hinged on a comparison between home market sales of Type I cement and Type II and V
    cement.”) See also Gray Portland Cement and Clinker From Mexico , 
    63 Fed. Reg. 12764
    , 12771
    (Mar. 16, 1998), which distinguished sales of Type II cement as outside the ordinary course of trade
    because 1) it was a specialty cement sold to a niche market, 2) shipping distances and freight costs
    were significant, and 3) there existed a “promotional quality” for Type II cement that did not exist
    for other types of cement.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 29
    produced in the same country by the same person as, that merchandise,” and this it argues is a
    “different statutory mandate” than 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (15). DuPont’s Supp. Resp. at 10-11.
    Continuing, it posits that if Commerce’s authority were restricted to type-to-type comparisons, there
    would be no basis to exclude particular sales within a type or model such as samples and product
    overruns, adding that while Commerce has exercised discretion to compare the attributes of sales
    of certain “types” of merchandise against the attributes of sales of other types, in other cases
    Commerce has chosen to make comparisons on an individual sale- or model-basis or in terms of
    ranges of sales, and that Commerce’s only consistent practice in these cases is to conduct its ordinary
    course of trade analysis with respect to all home market sales of merchandise of the same class or
    kind as subject merchandise.36
    Regarding prices and quantities, the government responds that Commerce correctly compared
    the conditions and practices of the subject merchandise to the conditions and practices of
    merchandise of the “same class or kind” and it argues Ausimont’s arguments are unavailing because
    adjustments to account for such are available under 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(6)(C)(ii). Def’s Resp. at
    34-35. See 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (15). It further argues that the fact that certain PTFE “models” had
    higher profits than the contested sales validated that the latter were within the “normal” range of
    profits for sales of PTFE granular resin. Also, it points out that it was Ausimont’s suggestion to
    compare gross rather than net profit, but whether net profit is more indicative of profitability it
    36
    DuPont’s Supp. Resp. at 9, referencing Certain Corrosion-Resistant Carbon Steel Flat
    Products from Japan, 
    64 Fed. Reg. 12951
     (Mar. 16, 1999) (“The particular facts of this case do not
    support a finding that the sales to the customer at issue were extraordinary transactions in relation
    to other sales transactions. There is no record evidence demonstrating any significant distinction
    between the sales at issue and other home market sales”); Polyvinyl Alcohol from Taiwan, 
    61 Fed. Reg. 14064
    , 14068 (Mar. 29, 1996).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                    PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 30
    asserts Commerce has discretion to decide what circumstances render highly profitable sales
    extraordinary. Id. at 33, referencing Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd., supra, 22 CIT at 568, 
    15 F. Supp.2d at 830
    .
    Regarding Ausimont’s argument on the absence of a “market” for wet reactor bead in Italy,
    the government argues that Ausimont’s 1993-94 questionnaire response statements dispelled the
    notion that the contested sales were not as “unusual” as Ausimont suggested and “revealed” that in
    fact wet reactor bead sales were made “over time.” Because the contested sales were (1) transacted
    with one of Ausimont’s regular customers, who purchased granular PTFE resin as well, (2) within
    the range of profits for all of the company’s resin sales, and (3) repeat occurrences, the government
    argues Commerce was justified in finding that the contested sales were “normal.” Def’s Resp. at 32.
    Again, it asserts the possibility of drawing two inconsistent conclusions from these facts does not
    mean that Commerce’s conclusion is unsupported by substantial evidence. Def’s Resp. at 35-36.
    DuPont adds that Commerce’s view of products or sales in one proceeding has no bearing on
    whether particular transactions are outside the ordinary course of trade in a subsequent proceeding.
    DuPont’s Resp. at 23, referencing Koyo Seiko, supra, 20 CIT at 783-84, 932 F. Supp at 1497-98.
    The government states usage should not even be considered because Ausimont did not raise
    argument thereon in its administrative case brief. Def’s Resp. at 32. DuPont, however, states that
    it is “incorrect” to assert that the use of wet reactor bead is dissimilar to granular PTFE resin because
    it contains all the latter’s “essential” characteristics and can be “easily” transformed into the finished
    product, as Commerce concluded when it included wet reactor bead within the scope of the
    antidumping duty order against granular PTFE resin from Italy. DuPont’s Resp. at 22.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 31
    Regarding the terms and conditions of the contested sales, the government insists Commerce
    did not have an opportunity at verification to explore the issue of differences between the contested
    sales and other sales since the documents gathered were not collected for that purpose and Ausimont
    did not raise the issue until after the preliminary determination. The government distinguishes the
    observation in Murata that sales canceled before invoicing are indicative of extraordinary sales as
    one of several leading to Commerce’s determination. Def’s Supp. Mem. at 17, referencing Murata
    Mfg. Co., supra, 17 CIT at 263, 820 F. Supp at 606. DuPont emphasizes that the verified documents
    were inconclusive because “pending orders” are indistinguishable from “open orders” for granular
    PTFE resin since these are mere indications of intention to purchase a quantity of granular PTFE
    resin at a particular price but not commitment; it is only when the purchaser informs of the desired
    quantity that price is established and the invoice is prepared.37 It points to Ausimont’s responses to
    the first questionnaire that “[p]rices are negotiated on a case-by-case basis with individual
    customers” and “are made on a delivered basis”.38 See generally DuPont’s Resp. at 25-26 & app.
    13.
    Responding to the “usual commercial quantities” facet of Ausimont’s claim, the government
    and DuPont state it is Commerce’s practice39 to examine whether there is a clear correlation between
    37
    See QR 1 at A-10-11 (PDoc 13, Fiche 5, Frs. 20-21; CDoc 1, Fiche 13, Frs. 20-21).
    38
    See id. at A-6 (PDoc 13, Fiche 5, Fr. 16; CDoc 1, Fiche 13, Fr. 16).
    39
    At least, prior to the URAA it was. See Fabrique de Fer de Charleroi S.A. v. United
    States, 
    22 CIT 6
    , 11, 
    994 F. Supp. 395
    , 399 (1998). See e.g. Iron Construction Castings from
    Canada, 
    56 Fed. Reg. 23274
    , 23276 (May 21, 1991); Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof,
    Finished and Unfinished, From Japan, 
    52 Fed. Reg. 30700
    , 30703 (Aug. 17, 1987) (Final Determ.
    LTFV).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                         Page 32
    price and quantity, that Ausimont first raised the issue in its administrative case brief, that Ausimont
    provided no such demonstration, and that even if the Court reaches the merits of the issue Ausimont
    has not demonstrated error in Commerce’s conclusion. Def’s Resp. at 40-43; DuPont’s Resp. at 37-
    39. DuPont adds that even if evidence of price-quantity correlation had been provided, the contested
    sales were not unusual or unrepresentative of commercial sales quantities given the fact that [        ]
    home-market transactions of foreign like product were larger than the contested sales, [ ] exceeded
    [ ] thousand kilograms, and [ ] were in the [ ] to [ ] thousand kilogram range.40
    C
    The ultimate question is whether there is substantial evidence on the record to support
    Commerce’s determination not to exclude the contested sales.              The purpose of excluding
    extraordinary sales “is to prevent dumping margins from being based on sales which are not
    representative.” Monsanto Co. v. United States, 
    12 CIT 937
    , 940, 
    698 F. Supp. 275
    , 278 (1988).
    By statute, “ordinary course of trade” is defined to mean the “conditions and practices which, for a
    reasonable time prior to the exportation of the subject merchandise, have been normal in the trade
    under consideration with respect to merchandise of the same class or kind”. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (15).
    Claims of extraordinary sales are concerned with what “ordinary course of trade” is not,41 therefore
    40
    DuPont’s Resp. at 38, referencing QR 1 at Ex. B-2 (CDoc 1, Fiche 15, Fr. 53-87). See
    DuPont’s ConApp. 4.
    41
    
    19 C.F.R. § 351.102
    (b) was the result of amendment to 
    19 C.F.R. § 353.46
     (1996) “so as
    to emphasize the fact-specific nature of ordinary course of trade analysis” and conform to the URAA.
    
    62 Fed. Reg. 27296
    , 27299 (May 19, 1997). International trade analysis is “fact specific,” of course,
    but the regulation provides that sales outside the ordinary course of trade as those which “have
    characteristics that are extraordinary.” Apart from that tautology, it also provides a non-exclusive
    list of examples, including merchandise that is “off-quality” or “produced according to unusual
    specifications” and transactions “at aberrational prices,” or with “abnormally high profits” or
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                       Page 33
    
    19 C.F.R. § 351.102
    (b) evinces a case-by-case approach to the problem which has been repeatedly
    sustained. See, e.g., NTN Bearing Corp. of America v. United States, Slip Op. 01-76, 
    2001 WL 708718
     (June 22, 2001); NSK Ltd. v. United States, Slip Op. 01-69, 
    2001 WL 630967
     (June 6, 2001);
    Torrington Co. v. United States, 25 CIT ___, 
    146 F. Supp. 2d 845
     (2001); Bergerac, N.C. v. United
    States, 24 CIT ___, 
    102 F. Supp. 2d 497
     (2000).
    In general, Ausimont criticizes the Final Results for analyzing each factor in isolation and
    from the perspective of whether the particular factor alone was so unusual as to render the contested
    sales outside the ordinary course of trade. If that is on the mark, that would not be in accordance
    with the “totality of the circumstances standard” enunciated in 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.102
    (b). Each
    relevant factor must, nonetheless, be considered.
    Commerce agreed that volume and frequency represented small percentages but concluded
    that the fact that their absolute amount was “larger on average than for other sales” was more
    important (i.e. “not insignificant”.) The Court disagrees with Ausimont’s theory that it was
    inconsistent to consider an absolute amount not insignificant in the analysis of volume but consider
    the same fact not significant when analyzing quantity. These are different perspectives, not polar
    opposites, and analysis of volume may be effected by frequency. Broadly speaking, examination of
    absolute amounts in addition to (or, possibly, as substitute for) relative volume would not be per se
    inconsistent with Commerce’s statutory mandate, and Commerce has “discretion to make reasonable
    interpretations of the evidence and to determine the overall significance of any particular factor or
    “unusual terms of sale,” or “to an affiliated party at a non-arm’s length price,” and in the final
    analysis a determination must be “based on an evaluation of all of the circumstances particular to
    the sales in question.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.102
    (b).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 34
    piece of evidence,” Maine Potato Council v. United States, 
    9 CIT 293
    , 300, 
    613 F. Supp. 1237
    , 1244
    (1985), however an absolute value has no inherent significance: it is the context of an observation
    which confers its significance. Cf. USX v. United States, 
    11 CIT 82
    , 85, 
    655 F. Supp. 487
    , 490
    (1987) (“it is the significance of a quantity of imports, and not absolute volume alone, that must
    guide ITC’s analysis under section 1677(7)”) (emphasis in original.) Of course, the context itself
    must be meaningful.42 Elsewhere, Commerce has stated that examination of relative volume and
    frequency is a “long-standing practice.”43 Here, however, Commerce offered only the observation
    that the contested sale amounts were larger on average than other sales, without explanation for the
    necessity of adopting a different approach to considering volume and frequency and little further
    elaboration. In light of the fact that the contested sales’ frequency was less than one half of one
    42
    See, e.g., Canned Pineapple Fruit From Thailand, 
    supra,
     60 Fed. Reg. at 29562-63
    (“Dole’s single third country sale of this product constituted an insignificant portion of its total
    German sales volume”.) Cf. USX v. United States, 
    11 CIT 82
    , 85, 
    655 F. Supp. 487
    , 490 (1987)
    (rejecting ITC’s analysis of market penetration data which consisted solely of the statement that
    levels of market penetration remained low and stable, without discussion of the significance of this
    trend or its relationship to other facts uncovered in the investigation); Federal Mogul Corp. v. United
    States, 
    20 CIT 234
    , 261-263, 
    918 F. Supp. 386
    , 410-11 (1996) (congressional silence on
    “significant” content of further-manufactured imports and application of the Roller Chain rule.) On
    this point, Commerce’s own practice appears to indicate awareness. See, e.g., Fresh Tomatoes From
    Mexico, 
    61 Fed. Reg. 56608
    , 56610 (Nov. 1, 1996) (Prelim. Determ. LTFV) (discussion on targeted
    dumping); Large Newspaper Printing Presses and Components Thereof, Whether Assembled or
    Unassembled, From Japan, 
    61 Fed. Reg. 38139
    , 38162 at Comment 12 (July 23, 1996) (Final
    Determ. LTFV). But, on whether there is substantial evidence to uphold a determination that an
    absolute amount of wet reactor bead sold was “not insignificant,” the Court has been requested to
    contemplate the matter under the “significance” of the weight of dead fish from Fresh Atlantic
    Salmon, a prospect few would relish, if any.
    43
    Decision Memorandum, Gray Portland Cement and Clinker From Mexico, supra, 
    65 Fed. Reg. 13943
    . Indeed, Commerce apparently considers volume and frequency of such import that
    under certain conditions they prove sales are unusual, obviating consideration of other factors,
    although that would appear to be the exceptional situation. Compare 
    id.
     with, e.g., NTN Bearing
    Corp. of America v. United States, 23 CIT ___, ___, 
    83 F. Supp. 2d 1281
    , 1288 (1999).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                       Page 35
    percent and their volume approximately 2.0 percent of home market sales, the reader is left
    wondering what is significant about the fact that they are larger on average than “other sales,” even
    assuming the Final Results are read to mean “all” or “most.” Cf. Rautaruukki Oy v. United States,
    Slip Op. 99-39, 
    1999 WL 270028
     (1999); Rautaruukki Oy v. United States, 
    22 CIT 786
    , 790, 
    1998 WL 465219
    , at *3 (“neither must the court regard as substantial evidence seemingly nominal
    differences in chemical composition, the significance of which Commerce has not explained.”)44
    The government contends that because ordinary course of trade determinations are case-by-
    case, Commerce did not have to explain further in light of Allied Signal. Such an interpretation must
    be rejected. A reviewing court must understand the basis of the agency’s action in order to be able
    to judge the consistency of that action with the agency’s general mandate. See Chennault v.
    Department of the Navy, 
    796 F.2d 465
     (Fed. Cir. 1986).45 Allied Signal neither disturbs the well-
    established principle that an agency must articulate a “rational connection between the facts found
    and the choices made,” Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 156
    , 168 (1962), nor
    relieves Commerce from explaining any departure from “established” agency practice. See Atchison,
    44
    Regarding volume, cf. also Craig v. Boren, 
    429 U.S. 190
    , 201-202 (1976) (“if maleness
    is to serve as a proxy for drinking and driving, a correlation of 2% must be considered an unduly
    tenuous ‘fit’.”) The Court also finds it of interest that Commerce normally requires foreign like
    product sales of 5% of the aggregate quantity or value of U.S. subject merchandise sales in order to
    find a “viable” overseas market for comparison purposes. See 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.404
    (b).
    45
    Furthermore, if a reviewing court cannot connect the dots between the agency’s considered
    factors and the action taken, the agency’s determination may be considered arbitrary or capricious.
    See, e.g., Consolidated Bearings Co. v. United States, Slip Op. 01-66, 
    2001 WL 607015
    , *8 (June
    5, 2001); Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. v. United States, 23 CIT ___, ___, 
    86 F. Supp. 2d 1232
    , 1239
    (1999); The Humane Society of The United States v. Clinton, 23 CIT ___, ___, ___, 
    44 F. Supp. 2d 260
    , 269, 277 (1999); NTN Bearing Corp. of America v. United States, 
    19 CIT 1165
    , 1170, 
    903 F. Supp. 62
    , 67 ( 1995); Sugiyama Chain Co., Ltd. v. United States, 
    19 CIT 328
    , 333, 
    880 F. Supp. 869
    ,
    873 (1995).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 36
    Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Wichita Bd. of Trade, 
    412 U.S. 800
    , 808 (1971). The apparent
    administrative preference being analysis of relative volume and frequency, not absolute amount, the
    matter will be remanded for consideration therefor or explanation why such would be insufficient.
    There also appear to be flaws in the Final Results in the analyses on quantity, price, and
    profit. Ausimont argued that average quantities five times that of granular PTFE resin cannot be
    considered “normal”for this other type of PTFE. In dismissing this proof, Commerce stated there
    was an insufficient basis in the record for determining whether “this difference” in quantity “is in
    fact attributable to circumstances rendering the sales in question extraordinary or unrepresentative
    of normal sales.”46 On the one hand, this reasoning appears circular: to show extraordinary sales
    Commerce required Ausimont to prove significantly different quantities, but to prove the quantities
    significantly different, Ausimont was, in effect, required to prove that the sales were extraordinary
    or unrepresentative. Whether the reason for a difference is indiscernible, that does not negate the
    degree of the difference itself, which must be considered in the context of the totality of the
    circumstances unless the comparison is inappropriate. On the other hand, there were no other home
    market sales of wet reactor bead for comparison purposes, and Commerce may have regarded the
    quantitative comparisons through the prism of granular PTFE resin sales and questioned the
    assumption of ceteris paribus (“all other things being equal.”) Certainly it did so with respect to
    Ausimont’s comparison on price, which was dismissed on the ground that wet reactor bead and
    granular PTFE resin are different products for which there is no reasonable expectation of similar
    46
    The Final Results also state that “the fact that home market sales of wet reactor bead were
    made in quantities higher than average does not support a conclusion that a normal value based on
    the price of such sales would be unreasonably high.” If this was not intended to set an even higher
    standard for Ausimont to surmount, it is either a non sequitor (at best) or it is jumping the gun.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 37
    selling prices. Such logic should apply across the board, yet Commerce contradicted, by considering
    the “range” of the contested sale quantities not “so unusual as to render such sales inappropriate for
    our analysis,”47 and by observing higher profits on certain models of granular PTFE in order to
    negate the degree of disparity in profits for the contested sales as a whole.48 If ceteris paribus does
    not hold, then the fact that an observation falls within the range of a given “normal” population is
    doubtful, since the comparison is questionable.49 But if comparison of different product types is
    appropriate and meaningful in considering whether sales were extraordinary, then it was
    unreasonable to dismiss Ausimont’s comparison on the ground that wet reactor bead and granular
    PTFE resin are different products for which there is no reasonable expectation of similar selling
    prices.
    47
    Again, determining whether a fact is significant or insignificant is precisely the agency’s
    fact finding function, Maine Potato Council v. United States, 9 CIT at 300, 
    613 F. Supp. at 1244
    ,
    but the reader should not be left wondering what measure was employed therefor. Also, in framing
    the ordinary-course-of-trade provision, Commerce expressly rejected the suggestion that all sales
    should be presumed ordinary. See Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties, supra 62 Fed. Reg.
    at 27299. Notwithstanding the burden of proof on Ausimont, a standard which requires a claimant
    to “render such sales inappropriate to use such sales in the analysis” presumes precisely that.
    48
    Commerce also rejected, apparently, Ausimont’s profit comparison on the ground that “the
    identification of sales as having high profits does not necessarily render such sales outside the
    ordinary course of trade.” 63 Fed. Reg. at 49082 (citation omitted). That may be true as a general
    statement, see, e.g., Torrington Co. v. United States, supra, Slip Op. 01-56 (May 10, 2001) at 21,
    146 F. Supp. 2d at ___ (
    2001 WL 501205
     at *7), but if offered as justification it is evasive. Under
    the totality of the circumstances, high profitability can be probative on whether sales were outside
    the ordinary course of trade. See CEMEX, S.A. v. United States, 
    133 F.3d at 901
    . The inquiry should
    be focused on the degree of profitability involved as compared with what is considered “normal in
    the trade under consideration with respect to merchandise of the same class or kind”. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (15).
    49
    Furthermore, formal logic holds that “if A, then C” is not the same as “if C, then A,” unless
    the two are proven to be reflexive of one another. See Wells Fargo & Company And Subsidiaries
    v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 
    224 F.3d 874
    , 882 (8th Cir. 2000).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 38
    In order to know what is extraordinary, one must obviously know what is ordinary. In
    accordance with administrative and judicial precedent, Ausimont pointed to statistical proofs
    showing that the contested sales were in greater quantities, lower prices, and higher profits than the
    “vast majority” of “ordinary” merchandise. See, e.g., Thai Pineapple Public Co., supra. See also
    supra, note 15.    Ausimont deduced that when considered as a part of the “totality of the
    circumstances” such proofs tended to show that the contested sales are extraordinary. The parties
    dispute whether the demonstrated degrees of difference between wet reactor bead and granular PTFE
    resin contribute to the resolution of that issue. At a minimum, the comparisons highlight the degrees
    of difference between wet reactor bead and granular PTFE resin, and from the parties arguments it
    appears there is implicit agreement that wet reactor bead and granular PTFE resin are not equivalent
    products: they are distinct types of PTFE. The government and DuPont defend type-to-model
    comparisons but acknowledge Commerce was “well aware” of the differences between wet reactor
    bead and granular PTFE resin, and the Final Results indicate reliance on such differences to dispute
    the validity of aggregate quantitative comparisons. The differences between the products may not
    be those of apples and oranges, but they are at least as pronounced as those of apples and applesauce.
    Cf. Calcium Aluminate Cement, Cement Clinker and Flux From France, supra.50 However the
    50
    Considering the parties arguments on Calcium Aluminate Cement, Cement Clinker and
    Flux From France, the fact that the determination is concerned with § 1677(15) and not § 1677(16)
    is immaterial. To disclaim authority for distinguishing wet reactor bead from granular PTFE resin
    because of a “clear preference” for price-to-price comparison and the “heirarchical rules” in §
    1677(16), if that is the argument, is to put the cart before the horse: the determination of NV and the
    appropriate “foreign like product” is premised on sales which were made in the ordinary course of
    trade. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(1)(B)(i). Commerce’s discretion in the appropriate selection of
    foreign like product, see Koyo Seiko, 
    66 F.3d 1204
     (Fed. Cir. 1995), is not in doubt.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 39
    disagreement is resolved,51 sales must be examined for what they are, whether or not there is formal
    division into distinct foreign like product categories or aggregate data analysis. In the Court’s
    opinion, the Final Results fall short of appropriate and full consideration of such differences or
    adequate reasoning why such would not be meaningful, and it is therefore necessary to remand the
    matter for further reflection.
    Commerce also rejected Ausimont’s usual-commercial-quantities claim for the same reasons
    it rejected Ausimont’s arguments on quantity in the context of the ordinary-course-of-trade claim,
    not on the basis of a failure to demonstrate a price-quantity correlation. Because it is necessary for
    Commerce to reconsider quantity in accordance with the foregoing, this issue will also be remanded
    for reconsideration. The Court further notes Ausimont’s assertion that since passage of the URAA,
    Commerce has excluded unusual-commercial-quantity sales without reference to price-quantity
    correlation. Pls’ Supp. Rep. at 23-24, citing Steel Wire Rod From Canada, supra, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 9182
    ; Pure and Alloy Magnesium from Norway, 
    57 Fed. Reg. 30942
     (July 13, 1992) (Final Neg.
    Determ.); Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered Roller Bearings) and Parts Thereof From The
    Federal Republic of Germany, 
    56 Fed. Reg. 31692
     (July 11, 1991).
    In considering the “market” for the subject merchandise and “merchandise of the same class
    or kind,” whether an importer has made sales in the ordinary course of trade depends upon whether
    the importer made the sales under conditions that are normal for the product being sold, not whether
    51
    Ausimont points out that the government “conceded” that Commerce analyzes different
    product types by comparing variable differences on the basis of aggregate sales. Pls’ Supp. Mem.
    at 17, referencing Gray Portland Cement and Clinker From Mexico, supra, 62 Fed. Reg. at 17587;
    Pipes From India, supra. In any event, Commerce must correct and, as necessary, clarify the Final
    Results in accordance with this opinion and consistently with administrative practice.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 40
    the importer ordinarily sells the merchandise. East Chilliwack Fruit Growers Co-operative v. United
    States, 
    11 CIT 104
    , 108, 
    655 F. Supp. 499
    , 504 (1987). Minimal sales or demand may be probative
    on the market conditions for a product, e.g. Thai Pineapple Public Co., supra, and market conditions
    may be inferred from the record evidence. Mantex, supra, 17 CIT at 1405, 841 F. Supp at 1307. The
    presence of demand does not necessarily indicate a meaningful market. Gray Portland Cement and
    Clinker From Mexico, supra, 64 Fed. Reg. at 13157.
    It is noted, as DuPont asserts, that Commerce’s view of products or sales in one proceeding
    might have little bearing on whether particular transactions are outside the ordinary course of trade
    in a subsequent proceeding. See Heveafil Sdn. Bhd. v. United States, Slip Op. 01-22 at 26, 
    2001 WL 194986
     at *11, note 12 (Feb. 27, 2001)52 (“It is well established that Commerce may change its
    position as long as it provides adequate explanation for such a change.”) (citations omitted.)
    However, the inquiry must take into account the conditions and practices which have been normal
    in the trade under consideration with respect to merchandise of the same class or kind “for a
    reasonable time prior to the exportation of the subject merchandise,” 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (15), and the
    circumstances of a particular case will determine what is a “reasonable” time prior to the exportation
    of the subject merchandise. The Final Results’ rationale was that “Ausimont’s claim regarding the
    absence of past home market sales of this merchandise focuses entirely on the immediately prior
    review, without addressing the fact that the respondent has in fact sold wet reactor bead in the home
    market in previous segments of this proceeding.” 63 Fed. Reg. at 49082 (highlighting added).
    52
    See also Koyo Seiko, supra, 20 CIT at 784, 932 F. Supp at 1498; Cultivos Miramonte S.A.
    v. United States, 
    21 CIT 1059
    , 1064, 
    980 F. Supp. 1268
    , 1274 (1997); Citrosuco Paulista, S.A. v.
    United States, 
    12 CIT 1196
    , 1209, 
    704 F. Supp. 1075
    , 1088 (1988).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                      Page 41
    Commerce paints with too broad a brush: the record shows wet reactor bead was previously sold
    only during the 1993-94 segment. Furthermore, whether Commerce was attempting to support
    finding the existence of a market or merely refuting Ausimont’s contention that there was no market,
    it had to stretch back across four segments and five years for such. Nonetheless, the government and
    DuPont urge that it was reasonable to conclude that the market for the contested sales was
    “significant” because these were repeat occurrences to one of Ausimont’s regular customers.
    Under different circumstances the argument might prevail, however in Canned Pineapple
    Fruit From Thailand it was the fact that a single customer was involved which was determined
    controlling. The fact that the customer was regular was not. See Thai Pineapple Public Co., supra,
    20 CIT at 1315, 946 F. Supp. at 16. See also 60 Fed. Reg. at 29563. In view of the similarity of
    circumstances to that instance, it was unreasonable to reach a contrary determination here without
    further explanation or appropriate differentiation. Moreover, Commerce observed that in the 1993-
    94 circumvention proceeding, similarly, Ausimont reported it “produces and sells PTFE wet reactor
    bead to home-market customers in Italy.” 63 Fed. Reg. at 49082 (citation omitted). There were
    two such sales in Italy at that time, which Commerce determined constituted “virtually no market,”
    with the result that Commerce relied on cost of production data to determine that the difference in
    value between wet reactor bead imported into the United States and U.S. sales of granular PTFE
    resin was “small.” See note 23, supra. For this POR, Ausimont reported, similarly, three home
    market sales of wet reactor bead. Using frequency as a guide, there is “virtually” no difference
    between this number and those considered in the 1993-94 segment. Accordingly, consideration of
    market must be remanded for similar treatment or adequate further explanation.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 42
    The last factor for consideration is Ausimont’s argument on the fact that the terms of and
    conditions for the contested sales were different. In the Final Results, Commerce agreed that the
    documentation of the contested sales it had collected during verification showed different terms of
    sale for wet reactor bead and for granular resin. Nevertheless, it avoided consideration of those
    differences on the ground that it "did not examine or collect these exhibits for this purpose and
    Ausimont officials did not discuss such differences at verification." 63 Fed. Reg. at 49082. Thus,
    Commerce stated it was unable to conclude from the documentation that the terms of sale for wet
    reactor bead "generally differed significantly" from finished granular PTFE resin "or that different
    terms of sale are not generally applicable to all sales." Id.
    Ausimont argues that this is insufficient, because Commerce was required to verify the terms
    of trade for granular PTFE resin, which it did by selecting what it considered was a representative
    sample of five sales. To the extent the argument addresses the apparent procedural barrier to
    consideration erected by Commerce, the Court agrees. The comparison of terms and conditions
    between products sold in the U.S. and foreign markets is essential to the dumping inquiry. See
    Federal-Mogul Corp. v. United States, 
    63 F.3d 1572
    , 1575 n.1 (Fed. Cir. 1995), quoting Joseph E.
    Pattison, Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Laws, § 1.02[1] (1994). Furthermore, Commerce
    is required to “verify all information relied upon in making . . . a final determination in a review
    under [19 U.S.C.] section 1675(a).” 19 U.S.C. § 1677m(i) (1994) (highlighting added). Commerce
    may use averaging and statistically valid samples and has exclusive authority in the selection thereof,
    see 19 U.S.C. § 1677f-1 (1994), and for its purposes it chose five granular PTFE resin sales for
    verification. It thereby verified the terms and conditions of granular PTFE resin sales in Italy.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 43
    At a minimum, Commerce’s response to Ausimont’s argument indicates comparison of wet
    reactor bead and granular PTFE resin terms and conditions was appropriate to the inquiry. The Final
    Results state Commerce did not examine or gather documentation “for this purpose.” The Court
    does not interpret Commerce’s statement as disavowal of verification of the terms and conditions
    for wet reactor bead and granular PTFE resin sold in Italy, since the purpose for seeking the
    documentation matters not, and the hierarchy of 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (16) does not authorize relaxation
    of agency inquiry into the terms and conditions of wet reactor bead and granular PTFE resin sold in
    Italy, i.e. the “hierarchical rules” would only matter post-verification. If clarification of the terms
    and conditions for any of the examined sales was necessary, that is the purpose of verification, but
    if there were matters pertaining to the alleged differences between the wet reactor bead sales and
    granular PTFE resin sales in Italy into which Commerce would have required clarification from
    officials at Ausimont's Bollate facility, neither the government nor DuPont offered further
    explanation, and the Court will not speculate. Hence, the rationale in the Final Results cannot be
    sustained, since they are unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, and there appears no
    basis for not proceeding to consider the differences of terms of trade on the basis of the
    documentation in the record. This matter will therefor be remanded to Commerce.
    Whether the terms and conditions for the contested sales can be said to be “unusual”, see 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.102
    (b), such that they support concluding that the contested sales were extraordinary
    would depend, again, upon what is usual or unusual in the market for the product(s) in question. Cf.
    East Chilliwack Fruit Growers Co-operative, supra, 11 CIT at 108, 655 F. Supp. at 504. As
    discussed above, the “market” for wet reactor bead may be in doubt, but the Court notes that
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 44
    “unusual” terms and conditions have included cancellation of orders. See Murata Mfg. Co., supra.
    Ausimont directs attention to the facts that the contested sales were on a “pending” order versus an
    “open” order basis and that it cancelled part of a sale and that prices for wet reactor bead are adjusted
    to reflect their dry weight and that prices for wet reactor bead in Italy were not “standard” but were
    separately negotiated and so forth, but it is for Commerce to decide, at this point, what impact or
    weight such considerations have in the analysis.
    II
    Ausimont’s second claim concerns the correct amount of statutory profit to allocate to the
    importations of subject merchandise. In the Final Results, Commerce explained that its calculation
    of CEP profit is consistent with its statutory interpretation of “total United States expenses” and
    administrative practice. Final Results at 49083-49084, referencing Canned Pineapple Fruit from
    Thailand: Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 7392
    , 7395 (Feb.
    13, 1998); Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered Roller Bearings) and Parts Thereof From
    France et al., 
    62 Fed. Reg. 2081
    , 2127 (Jan. 15, 1997) (Final Rev. Results). See 19 U.S.C. §
    1677a(f) (1994).
    All of Ausimont’s U.S. sales of subject merchandise required the use of CEP, a calculation
    which approximates ex factory price by taking the first arm’s length U.S. selling price and reducing
    it by:
    (1) the amount of any of the following expenses generally incurred by
    or for the account of the producer or exporter, or the affiliated seller
    in the United States, in selling the subject merchandise (or subject
    merchandise to which value has been added)--
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                        Page 45
    (A) commissions for selling the subject merchandise in the
    United States;
    (B) expenses that result from, and bear a direct relationship
    to, the sale, such as credit expenses, guarantees and
    warranties;
    (C) any selling expenses that the seller pays on behalf of the
    purchaser; and
    (D) any selling expenses not deducted under subparagraph
    (A), (B), or (C);
    (2) the cost of any further manufacture or assembly (including
    additional material and labor), except in circumstances described in
    subsection (e) of this section; and
    (3) the profit allocated to the expenses described in paragraphs (1)
    and (2).
    19 U.S.C. § 1677a(d) (1994). The statutory profit (“CEP profit”) in subsection (3) is described at
    19 U.S.C. § 1677a(f), and is determined by multiplying “total actual profit” by the “applicable
    percentage,” which is the ratio of “total United States expenses” to “total expenses”.53 19 U.S.C §
    1677a(f)(1) (1994). “Total United States expenses” are defined at 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(f)(2)(B) as “the
    total expenses described in subsection (d)(1) and (d)(2)” above, and “total expenses” are defined as
    all expenses in the first of the following categories which applies and which
    are incurred by or on behalf of the foreign producer and foreign exporter of
    the subject merchandise and by or on behalf of the United States seller
    affiliated with the producer or exporter with respect to the production and
    sale of such merchandise:
    (i) The expenses incurred with respect to the subject merchandise sold
    in the United States and the foreign like product sold in the exporting country
    53
    The calculation of CEP profit depends upon data submitted by the respondent in the CV
    or COP database. Where a respondent is not required to submit CV or COP information, Commerce
    relies on expense and profit information derived from the respondent’s financial reports.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 46
    if such expenses were requested by the administering authority for the
    purpose of establishing normal value and constructed export price.
    19 U.S.C. § 1677a (f)(2)(C).
    The term “total actual profit” is defined as:
    the total profit earned by the foreign producer, exporter, and affiliated parties
    described in subparagraph (C) [above] with respect to the sale of the same
    merchandise for which total expenses are determined under such
    subparagraph.
    19 U.S.C. § 1677a (f)(2)(D).
    The foregoing may be restated as follows, a formula to which Commerce adheres:
    Total U.S. (Selling) Expenses
    CEP Profit = Total Actual Profit         X          Total Expenses
    The calculation of CEP profit is a two-step process. See generally Import Administration
    Policy Bulletin 97/1 (Sep. 4, 1997). When calculating “total actual profit,” Commerce essentially
    subtracts “total expenses” from total global revenues (net of rebates and discounts) for subject
    merchandise and foreign like product based on aggregation of per-unit information. Commerce
    calculates “total expenses” as the sum of “cost of merchandise,” “selling expenses,” and
    “movement/packing costs” for the U.S. and comparison markets. “Cost of merchandise” is treated
    as the sum of manufacturing, general and administrative expenses, and includes actual (global) net
    interest expenses derived from a respondent’s CV database (in the case of subject merchandise) and
    COP database (in the case of foreign like product.) The total U.S. and comparison market “selling
    expenses” include direct and indirect selling expenses and any further manufacturing costs incurred
    in the United States. At this stage, however, “selling expenses” take no account of imputed credit
    expenses and inventory carrying costs. Id.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 47
    Having calculated “total actual profit,” the “applicable percentage” is calculated based on the
    same “total expenses” which were calculated in accordance with the foregoing (i.e., it includes actual
    global net interest expenses,) but at this stage, Commerce requires the addition of imputed credit and
    inventory carrying cost expenses in the calculation of “total United States expenses,” the numerator
    of the CEP profit ratio.54 In other words, total U.S. “selling expenses” mean different things at the
    different stages of the CEP profit calculation. The reason, Commerce generally offers, is because
    the calculation of “actual profit” takes into account “actual interest. ” Id. See id. at n.5.
    Ausimont’s complaint is that including imputed credit expenses and inventory carrying costs
    in the “total United States expenses” numerator but not in the “total expenses” denominator
    artificially inflated the CEP profit allocated to each U.S. sale. The government counters that interest
    expenses actually incurred are already included in the denominator, and therefore to include imputed
    expenses in the denominator would be double counting. Def’s Resp. at 48, referencing Certain
    Cold-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products From the Netherlands, 
    62 Fed. Reg. 18476
    , 17479 (Apr.
    15, 1997) (Final Rev. Results). The government states Commerce’s position is predicated upon the
    Statement of Administrative Action, H.R. Rep. No. 103-826 at 656 (1994) (“SAA”), which
    accompanied the URAA (p. 825):
    total profit is calculated on the same basis as the total expenses . . .[and n]o
    distortion in the profit allocable to U.S. sales is created if total profit is
    determined on the basis of a broader product-line than the subject
    merchandise, because the total expenses are also determined on the basis of
    54
    Commerce also considers that: [f]rom a computer programming standpoint, it may be
    easier and more efficient to compute the amount of CEP profit using a single ratio of total actual
    profit to total actual expenses [which] . . . would then be applied to [‘total United States expenses’.]”
    Import Administration Policy Bulletin 97/1 n.6 (Sep. 4, 1997). Cf. Final Results at 49084 (“applying
    this rate to a U.S. selling expense pool inclusive of [imputed] expenses”.)
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                       Page 48
    the same expanded product line. Thus the larger profit pool is multiplied by
    a commensurately smaller percentage.
    Ausimont relies for support on Thai Pineapple Canning Industry Corp., Ltd. v. United States,
    Slip Op. 99-42, 
    1999 WL 288772
     (1999), however the rationale for the decision was derived from
    U.S. Steel Group–A Unit of USX Corp. v. United States, 
    22 CIT 670
    , 
    15 F. Supp. 2d 892
     (1998),
    which was recently reversed by the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“CAFC”). See U.S.
    Steel Group–A Unit of USX Corp. v. United States, 
    225 F.3d 1284
     (Fed. Cir. 2000). The CAFC
    found ambiguity in 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(f)(2), applied Chevron “deference”55 , and found the inclusion
    of movement expenses in “total expenses”a “permissible” construction of the statute. U.S. Steel
    Group–A Unit of USX Corp. v. United States, 
    225 F.3d 1284
    , 1292 (Fed. Cir. 2000). Of interest is
    the point that the appellate judges regarded 19 U.S.C. § 1677a as equating “total expenses” with “all
    expenses,” yet found that the statute’s “plain language and structure”56 undercut this court’s
    interpretation of the ratio of “total U.S. expenses” to “total expenses” as requiring symmetry as a
    matter of mathematical logic. That would appear, likewise, to undercut Ausimont’s argument here.
    55
    In reviewing an agency’s construction of a statute that it administers, if “Congress has
    directly spoken to the precise question at issue,” then a reviewing court and the agency “must give
    effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.” Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural
    Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. United States, 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842-43 (1984). If Congress has not
    directly spoken on the issue, a reviewing court must inquire whether the agency’s interpretation “is
    based on a permissible interpretation of the statute” and, if so, defer to it. 
    Id.
    56
    Aside from ambiguity, the CAFC will apply Chevron deference to agency statutory
    construction but reviews this court’s statutory interpretation without deference. 
    225 F.3d at 1286
    ,
    citing Koyo Seiko Co. v. United States, 
    36 F.3d 1565
    , 1570 (Fed. Cir. 1994). Compare U.S. Steel
    Group–A Unit of USX Corp. v. United States, 
    225 F.3d 1284
    , 1290 (Fed. Cir. 2000), with 
    id.,
     
    22 CIT 670
    , 676, 
    15 F. Supp. 2d 892
    , 896 (1998).
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                          Page 49
    Furthermore, in this court’s prior examination of the remand results from Commerce,
    although it accepted the plaintiff’s comment that “the manner of calculating U.S. imputed interest
    expenses may result in some cases in amounts which are not fully reflected in the total interest
    expenses figure which is used in the denominator of the CEP profit ratio,” it also accepted the
    government’s avoidance-of-double-counting theory. Thai Pineapple Canning Industry Corp., Ltd.
    v. United States, Slip Op. 00-17 at 19-20, 
    2000 WL 174986
     at *6 (Feb 10, 2000). The court further
    considered that the plaintiff could not establish that the applicable percentage in that case was in fact
    distorted, for example (and without implying that these are actually distortive) because of “differing
    expenses over time” or “no or little actual U.S. interest expenses, but only imputed U.S. expenses,”
    
    id.,
     and such reasoning would apply here as well. The record does not appear to support a finding
    in favor of Ausimont. Cf. A-6 (PD 13, Fiche 5, Fr. 16; CD 1, Fiche 13, Fr. 16) (warehousing); Letter
    enclosing updated U.S. and home market databases from Ausimont to Commerce of 12/19/97 (CDoc
    3, Fiche 14, Frs. 97-98, Fiche 15, Frs. 2, 5, 7-8) (financial statements.)
    Ausimont also argues that imputed credit expenses and inventory carrying costs (included
    in “total United States expenses”) and global net interest expenses (included in “total expenses”) are
    different categories of expenses calculated using different rates of interest, time periods, and product
    values. Global net interest expenses are actual interest expenses associated with total operations in
    the U.S., comparison and third-country markets and are computed by allocating consolidated actual
    interest expenses reported on company’s financial statements (i.e. the sum of short- and long-term
    borrowing expenses) to production activities in the U.S. and comparison markets. By contrast,
    imputed credit expenses and inventory carrying costs are calculated based on receivable periods,
    Court No. 98-10-03063                   PUBLIC VERSION                                           Page 50
    short-term borrowing rates, gross unit prices, inventory values, and holding periods. In other words,
    Ausimont argues, they are opportunity costs not reflected in the financial statements but are
    associated, ipsi dixit, with selling to activities in the United States and comparison markets. Pls’ Rep.
    at 57-59 and n.27. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(d)(1)(C) (1994). Ausimont’s contends that in the “real
    world,” the common business practice is to delay payment to vendors in order to offset delayed
    payments from purchasers such that the “opportunity costs” are associated with selling activities only
    in theory, not in reality. Pls’ Rep. at 60 and n.28, (citations omitted). Therefore, Ausimont contends
    the implication that opportunity costs “result” in increased short-term borrowings or delayed
    retirement of debt, see DuPont’s Resp. at 41,57 is not, necessarily, true in a well-managed company,
    and certainly not with respect to Ausimont itself. “Simply put, the time value of money applies
    equally to money flowing in and money flowing out,” Ausimont argues, and from this it concludes
    that Commerce’s assertion that the actual interest expenses in the denominator of the CEP profit
    ratio somehow represent or capture the imputed expenses in the numerator “is without merit”. Pls’
    Rep. at 60.
    57
    In Thai Pineapple Canning Industry, Ltd., the government also argued:
    The annual interest expense incurred by a company, and reported as
    an element of COP/CV, will reflect the extent to which the company
    does not immediately receive payment upon production of the
    merchandise, i.e., the opportunity cost of having the merchandise sit
    in inventory prior to sale, and of extending credit after the sale. To the
    extent that a company incurs a longer waiting period between
    production and payment, it will not have recourse to such funds and
    will generally incur greater financial expenses relative to receiving
    payment immediately upon production.
    Slip Op. 00-17 at 18 n.11, 
    2000 WL 174986
     at *6.
    Court No. 98-10-03063                  PUBLIC VERSION                                       Page 51
    Ausimont’s real bone of contention appears to be the administrative practice of imputing
    expenses at all. See Silver Reed America, Inc. v. United States, 
    12 CIT 39
    , 
    679 F. Supp. 12
    , reh’g
    granted, 
    12 CIT 250
    , 
    683 F. Supp. 1393
     (1988). Since U.S. trade law apparently requires the capture
    of imputed expenses, 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(d)(1)(B) (1994); cf. U.S. Steel Group, supra, 
    225 F.3d at 1290
    , cash management may be argument for offsetting imputed expense with imputed income prior
    to inclusion in the determination of “total U.S. expenses,” however that issue is not ripe for
    consideration in this matter.
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the matter will be remanded to Commerce for reconsideration of
    whether the home market sales in Italy of wet reactor bead were outside the ordinary course of trade.
    Commerce’s calculation of CEP profit for the subject merchandise is sustained.
    ____________________________________________
    R. KENTON MUSGRAVE, JUDGE
    Dated: August 2, 2001
    New York, New York
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Court 98-10-03063

Citation Numbers: 2001 CIT 92, 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 865

Judges: Musgrave

Filed Date: 8/2/2001

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

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Olympic Adhesives, Inc. v. United States , 899 F.2d 1565 ( 1990 )

federal-mogul-corporation-and-the-torrington-company-v-the-united-states , 63 F.3d 1572 ( 1995 )

the-thai-pineapple-public-co-ltd-siam-food-products-public-co-ltd , 187 F.3d 1362 ( 1999 )

nsk-ltd-and-nsk-corporation-and-nippon-pillow-block-sales-co-ltd-and , 190 F.3d 1321 ( 1999 )

koyo-seiko-co-ltd-and-koyo-corporation-of-usa-and-isuzu-motors-ltd , 36 F.3d 1565 ( 1994 )

ak-steel-corp-bethlehem-steel-corporation-inland-steel-industries-inc , 192 F.3d 1367 ( 1999 )

Bergerac, N.C. v. United States , 24 Ct. Int'l Trade 525 ( 2000 )

Sanyo Elec. Co., Ltd. v. United States , 23 Ct. Int'l Trade 355 ( 1999 )

Humane Society of the United States v. Clinton , 23 Ct. Int'l Trade 127 ( 1999 )

allied-signal-aerospace-company-garrett-engine-division-and-garrett , 28 F.3d 1188 ( 1994 )

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

Rhone Poulenc, Inc. And Rhone Poulenc Chimie De Base, S.A. ... , 899 F.2d 1185 ( 1990 )

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