98-9099. Certain Welded Stainless Steel Pipe From Taiwan; Preliminary Results of Changed Circumstances Antidumping Duty Administrative Review  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 66 (Tuesday, April 7, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 16982-16984]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-9099]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    [A-583-815]
    
    
    Certain Welded Stainless Steel Pipe From Taiwan; Preliminary 
    Results of Changed Circumstances Antidumping Duty Administrative Review
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce.
    
    
    [[Page 16983]]
    
    
    ACTION: Notice of preliminary results of changed circumstances 
    antidumping duty administrative review.
    
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    SUMMARY: Pursuant to a request from Chang Mien Industries Co., Ltd. 
    (Chang Mien), the Department of Commerce (the Department) initiated a 
    changed circumstances administrative review of the antidumping duty 
    order on certain welded stainless steel pipe from Taiwan, 62 FR 30567, 
    (June 4, 1997). Chang Mien requested that the Department determine that 
    Chang Mien is the successor firm to Chang Tieh Industry, Co., Ltd. 
    (Chang Tieh), a respondent excluded from the order in the less-than-
    fair-value (LTFV) investigation. See Notice of Amended Final 
    Determination and Antidumping Duty Order; Certain Welded Stainless 
    Steel Pipes From Taiwan, 59 FR 6619, (February 11, 1994); see also 
    Amended Final Determination and Antidumping Duty Order; Certain Welded 
    Stainless Steel Pipe From Taiwan, 57 FR 62300 (December 30, 1992). 
    Based on the information Chang Mien provided in its responses to the 
    Department's questionnaires and on the data obtained at verification, 
    we have preliminarily determined that Chang Mien is the successor-in-
    interest to Chang Tieh.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: April 7, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Maureen McPhillips at (202) 482-0193, or Linda Ludwig at (202) 482-
    3383, AD/CVD Enforcement Group III, Office 8, Import Administration, 
    International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th 
    Street and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230.
    
    The Applicable Statute and Regulations
    
        Unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the statute are 
    references to the provisions effective January 1, 1995, the effective 
    date of the amendments made to the Tariff Act of 1930 (the Act) by the 
    Uruguay Round Agreements Act. In addition, unless otherwise indicated, 
    all references to the Department's regulations are to 19 CFR Part 353 
    (April 1, 1997).
    
    Verification
    
        As provided in section 776(b) of the Act, we verified information 
    provided by Chang Mien using standard verification procedures, 
    including the examination of relevant sales and financial records, and 
    the selection of original source documentation containing relevant 
    information.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        On September 11, 1996, Chang Mien requested that the Department 
    conduct a changed circumstances administrative review pursuant to 
    section 751(b) of the Act to determine whether Chang Mien should 
    properly be considered the successor firm to Chang Tieh. In the LTFV 
    investigation, the Department excluded Chang Tieh from the antidumping 
    duty order on certain welded stainless steel pipe from Taiwan after 
    calculating a margin of zero for Chang Tieh. Chang Mien maintains that, 
    as Chang Mien and Chang Tieh were related at the time of the LTFV 
    investigation, Chang Mien is entitled to Chang Tieh's exclusion from 
    the order ab initio. Chang Mien further states that, since publication 
    of the antidumping duty order on this product, Chang Mien has absorbed 
    Chang Tieh, and asks that the Department issue a determination that 
    Chang Mien is the successor firm to Chang Tieh and as such is entitled 
    to Chang Tieh's exclusion from the antidumping duty order. Pursuant to 
    Chang Mien's request, the Department initiated a changed circumstance 
    review on June 4, 1997. See Certain Welded Stainless Steel Pipe from 
    Taiwan; Invitation of Changed Circumstances Antidumping Duty 
    Administrative Review, 62 FR 30567.
    
    Scope of the Review
    
        The merchandise subject to this antidumping duty order is welded 
    austenitic stainless steel pipe (WSSP) that meets the standards and 
    specifications set forth by the American Society for Testing and 
    Materials (ASTM) for the welded form of chromium nickel pipe designated 
    ASTM A-312. The merchandise covered by the scope of this order also 
    includes austenitic welded stainless steel pipes made according to the 
    standards of other nations which are comparable to ASTM A-312.
        WSSP is produced by forming stainless steel flat-rolled products 
    into a tubular configuration and welding along the seam. WSSP is a 
    commodity product generally used as a conduit to transmit liquids or 
    gases. Major applications include, but are not limited to, digester 
    brewery process and transport lines, general food processing lines, 
    automotive paint lines and paper process machines. Imports of WSSP are 
    currently classifiable under the following Harmonized Tariff Schedule 
    of the United States (HTS) subheadings: 7306.40.5005, 7306.40.5015, 
    7306.40.5040, 7306.40.5065 and 7306.40.5085. Although these subheadings 
    include both pipes and tubes, the scope of this antidumping duty order 
    is limited to welded austenitic stainless steel pipes. Although the HTS 
    subheadings are provided for convenience and Customs purposes, the 
    written description of the scope of this order is dispositive.
    
    Preliminary Results of Changed Circumstances Antidumping Duty 
    Administrative Review
    
        In accordance with section 751(b) of the Act, the Department 
    initiated a changed circumstances administrative review on June 4, 
    1997, to determine whether Chang Mien is the successor company to Chang 
    Tieh.
        In determining whether a merged company is the successor to another 
    for purposes of the antidumping duty law, the Department examines a 
    number of factors including, but not limited to, changes in (1) 
    management, (2) production facilities, (3) supplier relationships, and 
    (4) customer base. See e.g., Brass Sheet and Strip from Canada; Final 
    Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 57 FR 20460 (May 13, 
    1992). While no one or several of these factors will necessarily 
    provide a dispositive indication, the Department will generally 
    consider the company that merged with another company to be a successor 
    to the previous company if its resulting operation is substantially 
    similar to that of the predecessor. See e.g., Industrial Phosphoric 
    Acid from Israel; Final Results of Changed Circumstances Review, 59 FR 
    6944 (February 14, 1994). Thus, if evidence demonstrates that, with 
    respect to the production and sale of the subject merchandise, the 
    successor company operates as the same business entity as the former 
    company, the Department will treat the successor company the same as 
    the predecessor for purposes of antidumping duty liability.
        To determine whether Change Mien is the successor-in-interest to 
    Chang Tieh, we examined Chang Mein's initial request for a changed 
    circumstances review, and Chang Mien's responses to the Department's 
    supplemental questionnaires of October 27, 1997, and December 5, 1997. 
    In addition, from January 21 through January 23, 1997, we verified 
    Chang Mien's responses at its facilities in Kaoshung, Taiwan.
        Chang Mien, founded in 1972, began sales operations in 1977, 
    originally as a carbon steel coil center. In early 1984, Chang Mien 
    formed a subsidiary, Chang Tieh, to produce and market stainless steel 
    pipe. In 1989 Chang Mien acquired land adjacent to its steel coil 
    centers for construction of its stainless steel pipe mill. Chang Tieh 
    began producing non-
    
    [[Page 16984]]
    
    annealed pipe in 1990; the following year, Chang Tieh purchased and 
    installed an annealing furnace permitting it to produce ASTM A312 heat-
    treated pipe, the subject merchandise of the antidumping duty order. 
    While the non-annealed pipe was intended almost exclusively for 
    domestic consumption, the addition of the annealing furnace allowed 
    Chang Tieh to target export markets.
        In 1993 Chang Mien sought to merge Chang Tieh and another firm, 
    Jumbo Stainless Steel Corporation (Jumbo), into a single entity bearing 
    the Chang Mien name. The merger was prompted by Chang Mien's desire to 
    become a publicly-traded company on Taiwain's stock exchange. The 
    merger of the affiliated companies into one larger, consolidated entity 
    would make Chang Mien more attractive to investors in the market. Chang 
    Mien's 1991-1992 audited financial statements noted that a resolution 
    to absorb Chang Tieh and Jumbo with Chang Mien was adopted by the 
    stockholders on October 16, 1992. The Company (i.e. Chang Mien) would 
    be the continuing company, while Chang Tieh and Jumbo would be the 
    merged companies and cease to exist. The merger of Chang Tieh and Jumbo 
    was approved by the Fair Trade Commission of the Executive Yuan on 
    March 16, 1993.
        Chang Mien maintains that it was related to or affiliated with 
    respondent Chang Tieh, since both companies were owned by the same 
    individual. As such, Chang Mien asserts in its request for review that 
    it should have been excluded from the antidumping duty order ab initio 
    (see Chang Mien's Request for Sec. 751(b) Review, September 11, 1996, 
    Public Version, p. 2). Therefore, Chang Mien maintains that when it 
    absorbed Chang Tieh, it assumed Chang Tieh's exclusion from the 
    antidumping duty order.
        Basing our analysis on the four criteria cited above and evidence 
    on the record, we have preliminarily determined that Chang Mien is the 
    successor-in-interest to Chang Tieh. First, during the LTFV 
    investigation, the Department established Chang Tieh's relationship 
    with Chang Mien by virtue of common ownership by the same individual. 
    In addition, the management and organizational structure of the former 
    Chang Tieh, while undergoing some changes since the Department's 1991 
    period of investigation, remained essentially intact in the time 
    following the March 1993 merger. The production facilities, although 
    upgraded to some extent, are virtually the same, maintaining the same 
    production capacity. Although Chang Mien has recently added new 
    suppliers as the business environment changed, for the years 
    immediately following the merger, Chang Mien continued to deal with 
    essentially the same steel suppliers as those used by Chang Tieh prior 
    to the merger. Chang Mien's customer base has changed considerably from 
    the customers served by Chang Tieh, due to customer name changes, 
    bankruptcy, new customers, etc. However, given that Chang Mien absorbed 
    Chang Tieh more than four years ago we would expect change in the 
    customer base. Moreover, changes in the U.S. customer base are 
    understandable, given that Chang Tieh was a first-time entrant into the 
    U.S. pipe market during the 1991 POI. Therefore, factors other than the 
    merger of Chang Tieh with Chang Mien, contributed to the evolution to 
    customer base.
        As stated previously, we do not consider any one factor 
    dispositive; our decision is based on the totality of the evidence. Our 
    analysis of the evidence on the record leads us to preliminarily 
    determine that Chang Mien is the successor-in-interest to Chang Tieh, 
    since it essentially operates as the same entity as the former company, 
    maintaining the same management, production facilities, and supplier 
    relationships as did Chang Tieh prior to its merger with Chang Mien.
        Interested parties may submit case briefs and/or written comments 
    no later than 30 days after the date of publication of these 
    preliminary results. Rebuttal briefs and rebuttals to written comments, 
    limited to issues raise din such briefs or comments, may be filed no 
    later than 37 days after the date of publication. The Department will 
    publish the final results of this changed circumstances review which 
    will include its analysis of any such written comments.
        This notice is in accordance with section 751(b) of the Act, as 
    amended (19 U.S.C. 1675(b)), and section 353.22(f) of the Department's 
    regulations.
    
        Dated: March 31, 1998.
    Robert S. LaRussa,
    Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 98-9099 Filed 4-6-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/7/1998
Published:
04/07/1998
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of preliminary results of changed circumstances antidumping duty administrative review.
Document Number:
98-9099
Dates:
April 7, 1998.
Pages:
16982-16984 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-583-815
PDF File:
98-9099.pdf