98-15874. Circular Welded Non-Alloy Steel Pipe From the Republic of Korea; Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 115 (Tuesday, June 16, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 32833-32849]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-15874]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    [A-580-809]
    
    
    Circular Welded Non-Alloy Steel Pipe From the Republic of Korea; 
    Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: On December 8, 1997, the Department of Commerce published the 
    preliminary results of its administrative review of the antidumping 
    duty order on circular welded non-alloy steel pipe from the Republic of 
    Korea. This review covers imports of pipe from four producers/exporters 
    during the period November 1, 1995 through October 31, 1996.
        Based on our analysis of comments received, these final results 
    differ from the preliminary results. In addition, we continue to find 
    for these final results that sales of subject merchandise were made 
    below normal value during the review period.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: June 16, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cynthia Thirumalai or Craig Matney, 
    Import Administration, International Trade Administration, US 
    Department of Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW, 
    Washington DC 20230; telephone (202) 482-4087 and 482-1778, 
    respectively.
    
    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 (URAA). In addition, unless otherwise 
    indicated, all citations to the Department of Commerce's (the 
    Department's) regulations refer to the regulations, codified at 19 CFR 
    part 353, April 1997.
    
    Background
    
        This review covers four manufacturers/exporters, i.e., Hyundai Pipe 
    Co. Ltd. (Hyundai), Korea Iron and Steel Co., Ltd. (KISCO) and its 
    affiliate Union Steel Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (Union), SeAH Steel 
    Corporation (SeAH) and Shinho Steel Co., Ltd. (Shinho), collectively 
    referred to as ``the respondents.'' Since the publication of our Notice 
    of Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review of 
    Circular Welded Non-Alloy Pipe from the Republic of Korea, (Preliminary 
    Results) 62 FR 64559 (December 8, 1997), we received revised home 
    market datasets from the respondents in December 1998. We also received 
    case briefs from the respondents and from the petitioners on January 
    20, 1998, and rebuttal briefs on January 30, 1998.
    
    Scope of Review
    
        The merchandise subject to this review is circular welded non-alloy 
    steel pipe and tube, of circular cross-section, not more than 406.4mm 
    (16 inches) in outside diameter, regardless of wall thickness, surface 
    finish (black, galvanized, or painted), or end finish (plain end, 
    beveled end, threaded, or threaded and coupled). These pipes and tubes 
    are generally known as standard pipes and tubes and are intended for 
    the low-pressure conveyance of water, steam, natural gas, air, and 
    other liquids and gases in plumbing and heating systems, air-
    conditioning units, automatic sprinkler systems, and other related 
    uses. Standard pipe may also be used for light load-bearing 
    applications, such as for fence tubing, and as structural pipe tubing 
    used for framing and as support members for reconstruction or load-
    bearing purposes in the construction, shipbuilding, trucking, farm 
    equipment, and other
    
    [[Page 32834]]
    
    related industries. Unfinished conduit pipe is also included in this 
    order.
        All carbon-steel pipes and tubes within the physical description 
    outlined above are included within the scope of this review except line 
    pipe, oil-country tubular goods, boiler tubing, mechanical tubing, pipe 
    and tube hollows for redraws, finished scaffolding, and finished 
    conduit. In accordance with the Department's Final Negative 
    Determination of Scope Inquiry on Certain Circular Welded Non-Alloy 
    Steel Pipe and Tube from Brazil, the Republic of Korea, Mexico, and 
    Venezuela 61 FR 11608 (March 21, 1996), pipe certified to the API 5L 
    line-pipe specification and pipe certified to both the API 5L line-pipe 
    specifications and the less-stringent ASTM A-53 standard-pipe 
    specifications, which falls within the physical parameters as outlined 
    above, and entered as line pipe of a kind used for oil and gas 
    pipelines is outside of the scope of the antidumping duty order.
        Imports of these products are currently classifiable under the 
    following Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) subheadings: 7306.30.10.00, 
    7306.30.50.25, 7306.30.50.32, 7306.30.50.40, 7306.30.50.55, 
    7306.30.50.85, and 7306.30.50.90. Although the HTS subheadings are 
    provided for convenience and customs purposes, our written description 
    of the scope of this proceeding is dispositive.
    
    Date of Sale
    
        The respondents have argued that, contrary to the methodology used 
    in the Preliminary Results, we should use invoice date as the date of 
    sale for sales to the United States. For these final results, we 
    continue to find contract date to be the appropriate date of sale with 
    respect to sales to the United States. (For further discussion of this 
    issue, see Comment 1 in the General Comments section of this notice 
    below.)
    
    Product Comparisons
    
        On January 8, 1998, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 
    issued a decision in CEMEX v. United States (CEMEX), 1998 U.S. App. 
    LEXIS 163. In that case, based on the pre-URAA version of the Act, the 
    Court ruled that the Department may not resort immediately to 
    constructed value (CV) as the basis for foreign market value (now 
    normal value, or ``NV'') when the Department finds home market sales of 
    the identical or most similar merchandise to be outside the ordinary 
    course of trade. This issue was not raised by any party in this 
    proceeding. However, the URAA amended the definition of sales outside 
    the ordinary course of trade to include sales below cost. See, Section 
    771(15) of the Act. Consequently, the Department has reconsidered its 
    practice in accordance with this court decision and has determined that 
    it would be inappropriate to resort directly to CV as the basis for NV 
    where the Department finds foreign market sales of merchandise 
    identical or most similar to that sold in the United States to be 
    outside the ordinary course of trade. Instead, the Department will use 
    other sales of similar merchandise to compare to the US sales if such 
    sales exist. The Department will use CV as the basis for NV only when 
    there are no above-cost sales that are otherwise suitable for 
    comparison.
        Accordingly, in this proceeding, when making comparisons in 
    accordance with section 771(16) of the Act, we considered all home 
    market sales of the foreign like product that were in the ordinary 
    course of trade for purposes of determining appropriate product 
    comparisons to US sales. Where there were no sales of identical 
    merchandise in the home market in the ordinary course of trade to 
    compare to US sales, we compared US sales to sales of the most similar 
    foreign like product made in the ordinary course of trade, based on the 
    characteristics listed in Sections B and C of our antidumping 
    questionnaire. Thus, we have implemented the Court's decision in CEMEX 
    to the extent that the data on the record permitted.
        Aside from the preceding, we followed the methodology outlined in 
    our Preliminary Results with the following exception: for certain of 
    Shinho's models that had identical product characteristics but were 
    assigned non-identical control numbers, we recoded them with identical 
    control numbers.
    
    Export Price and Constructed Export Price
    
        We followed the methodology in the Preliminary Results with the 
    following exceptions: (1) We used in our analysis all export price (EP) 
    transactions that were entered during the POR; (2) we recalculated 
    adjustments for duty drawback for SeAH; (3) we recalculated the short-
    term interest rate for KISCO/Union on a collapsed basis; (4) we 
    included interest revenue in the calculation of net price for KISCO/
    Union.
    
    Normal Value
    
        We used the same methodology outlined in the Preliminary Results 
    with the following exceptions: (1) For sales with weight conversion 
    factors below the allowed minimum, we used the minimum as non-adverse 
    facts available; (2) sales failing the arm's-length test and resales of 
    products purchased from other producers were not included in the 
    product-matching concordance for Hyundai and SeAH; (3) we reallocated 
    SeAH's foreign brokerage, US duty and US brokerage expenses on a value 
    basis; (4) sales of overruns were removed from the arm's length test 
    for SeAH; (5) indirect selling expenses for KISCO/Union were 
    recalculated; (6) the short-term interest rate for KISCO/Union was 
    recalculated on a collapsed basis; (7) we recalculated Shinho's CV 
    interest expenses with respect to short-term interest offsets and 
    foreign exchange gains/losses; 8) we recalculated the credit expenses 
    for one of Shinho's home market customers.
    
    Level of Trade/CEP Offset
    
        We received no comment from interested parties on the methodology 
    we employed in the Preliminary Results with respect to level of trade. 
    Based on our analysis of information on the record as articulated in 
    the Preliminary Results, we are not changing our methodology with 
    respect to level of trade for these final results.
    
    Cost of Production Analysis
    
        As discussed in the Preliminary Results, we conducted an analysis 
    to determine whether the respondents made sales of the foreign like 
    product in the home market at prices below their cost of production 
    (COP) within the meaning of section 773(b)(1) of the Act. We used the 
    same methodology employed in the Preliminary Results with the following 
    exceptions: (1) The general and administrative (G&A) and interest 
    factors for all respondents were recalculated using a denominator 
    inclusive of packing; (2) we recalculated KISCO/Union's G&A and 
    interest expense on a collapsed basis; (3) we recalculated Shinho's 
    interest expenses with respect to short-term interest offsets and 
    foreign exchange gains/losses.
    
    Constructed Value
    
        In calculating CV, we followed the methodology employed in our 
    Preliminary Results, with the following exceptions: (1) The SG&A and 
    interest factors for all respondents were recalculated using a 
    denominator inclusive of packing; (2) we adjusted Hyundai's CV for 
    direct selling expenses incurred in the home market; (3) we converted 
    CV profit to a theoretical-weight basis for Shinho; (4) we corrected 
    the circumstance of sale (COS) adjustment for credit expenses for
    
    [[Page 32835]]
    
    Shinho; (5) we recalculated Shinho's interest expenses with respect to 
    short-term interest offsets and foreign exchange gains/losses.
    
    Interested Party Comments
    
    General Comments
    
    Comment 1: Invoice Date v. Contract Date as the Date of U.S. Sale
        The respondents note that before the issuance of the original 
    questionnaire in this proceeding on January 13, 1997, the Department 
    adopted the policy of using invoice date as the presumptive date of 
    sale in February 1996 with the publication of its proposed antidumping 
    regulations (see Antidumping and Countervailing Duties: Notice of 
    Proposed Rulemaking and request for Public Comments, (Proposed 
    Regulations) 61 FR 7308, 7381 (February 27, 1996)). Consistent with the 
    instructions in the questionnaire, the respondents state that they used 
    invoice date as the date of sale for US sales and received no 
    indication from the Department that this was not acceptable until 
    October 30, 1997, despite meetings subsequent to the issuing of the 
    questionnaire with Department officials on this same issue.
        The respondents acknowledge that the Proposed Regulations and Final 
    Regulations (i.e., Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties: Final 
    Rule, (Final Regulations) 62 FR 27926, 27411 (May 19, 1997) codified at 
    19 CFR Sec. 351.401(i)) speak of the use of dates other than invoice 
    date under circumstances involving long-term contracts, sales with 
    exceptionally long periods of time between invoice and shipment dates, 
    and situations involving large custom-made merchandise. However, the 
    respondents then point out that the particular circumstances in this 
    case with respect to US sales (i.e., long periods of time between the 
    date on which the material terms of sale are set and invoice date) do 
    not fall within these stated exceptions. The respondents also emphasize 
    that the Final Regulations clearly state that exceptions to the 
    presumption to use invoice date must be narrowly drawn. Indeed, the 
    respondents note that in Certain Stainless Steel Wire Rod from India: 
    Final Results of New Shipper Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 
    (Certain Stainless from India) 62 FR 38976, 38978 (July 21, 1997), the 
    Department maintained that the use of invoice date as the date of sale 
    was appropriate over the objection of the petitioners that the lag time 
    of up to several months between purchase order date and invoice date 
    was too long. The respondents also cite other cases in which the 
    Department held that invoice date was the appropriate date of sale.
        The respondents argue that since their sales processes are quite 
    typical for manufactured products, that they should be afforded typical 
    consideration--i.e., the use of invoice date as the date of sale. 
    Otherwise, argue the respondents, the exception of not using invoice 
    date as the date of sale would become the rule, and the selection of 
    the date of sale would be purely at the discretion of the Department.
        The respondents point out that even if the sales terms rarely 
    change after the contract date, the possibility for change exists and 
    sometimes does occur. The respondents then cite to the Preamble to the 
    Final Regulations where it states that ``absent satisfactory evidence 
    that the terms of sale were finally established on a different date, 
    the Department will presume that the date of sale is the date of 
    invoice'' (Final Regulations at 27349). According to the respondents, 
    the sales terms in this case are subject to change and are not, 
    therefore, ``finally established'' within the meaning of the Preamble 
    to the Final Regulations until the date of invoice.
        In addition, the respondents argue that using a different date of 
    sale for home market sales than for US sales contradicts the 
    Department's preference of using a single date of sale for a given 
    respondent instead of a different date for each sale, as stated in the 
    Preamble to the Final Regulations (see 62 FR 27348). As support for 
    using the same date of sale in both markets, the respondents cite to 
    Small Diameter Circular Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel Standard, Line 
    Pressure Pipe from Germany: Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty 
    Administrative Review, (Germany Line Pipe) 62 FR 47446, 47448 
    (September 9, 1997) in which the Department used shipment date (a proxy 
    for invoice date which occurred after the shipment date) despite a long 
    lag time between order confirmation date and shipment date in order to 
    maintain dates of sale in the home market and the United States on the 
    same basis.
        The petitioners point out that both the Proposed and Final 
    Regulations cited by respondents are not applicable to this proceeding 
    since it was initiated prior to the date on which these regulations 
    became effective. Even if they were, add the petitioners, the 
    Department's decision not to use invoice date as the date of sale for 
    US sales was fully consistent with those regulations as they state:
    
        [T]he Department may use a date other than the date of invoice 
    if the Secretary is satisfied that a different date better reflects 
    the date on which the exporter or producer establishes the material 
    terms of sale.
    
        See Final Regulations at 27411. The petitioners take issue with the 
    respondents' assertion that the listed exceptions are the only 
    allowable circumstances under which the Department may abandon the use 
    of invoice date. Instead, state the petitioners, the list of exceptions 
    is illustrative and not exhaustive. The petitioners also note that 
    while the respondents cite to language in the regulations speaking 
    generically about the malleable nature of sales terms up until the time 
    that payment is demanded, they have not cited to evidence on the record 
    of this proceeding which would demonstrate that sales terms in this 
    case are not usually established on the contract date for sales to the 
    United States. Rather, state the petitioners, there is more than 
    satisfactory evidence on the record of this proceeding showing that 
    contract date better reflects the date on which material terms of sale 
    were established for US sales.
    Department's Position
        While we agree with the respondents that the Department prefers to 
    use invoice date as the date of sale, we are mindful that this 
    preference does not require the use of invoice date if the facts of a 
    case indicate a different date better reflects the time at which the 
    material terms of sale were established. Indeed, as all parties have 
    recognized, both the Proposed and Final Regulations speak to giving the 
    Department flexibility to abandon the use of invoice date. In granting 
    this flexibility, the regulations anticipate the possibility of 
    inappropriate comparisons via the strict use of invoice date as the 
    date of sale.
        As for the respondents point that the facts in this case (i.e., 
    long lag times between contract date and invoice date) do not fit the 
    exceptions articulated in the regulations, we note that the exceptions 
    listed are exemplary and are not intended to be limiting as can be seen 
    in the Proposed Regulations where it states:
    
        [T]he Department recognizes that [invoice] date may not be 
    appropriate in some circumstances, such as those involving certain 
    long-term contracts or sales in which there is an exceptionally long 
    time between the date of invoice and the date of shipment. [Emphasis 
    added.] (Proposed Regulations at 7330.)
    
        If invoice date does not reasonably approximate the date on which 
    the material terms of sale were made in
    
    [[Page 32836]]
    
    either of the markets under consideration, then its blanket use as the 
    date of sale in an antidumping analysis is untenable. The facts in this 
    case, as explained below, clearly demonstrate that the use of invoice 
    date as the date of sale in both markets would lead to inappropriate 
    comparisons.
        In this case, the sales processes for US and home market sales 
    differ markedly. Sales in the home market are typically out of 
    inventory with the purchase order/contract, invoice and shipment dates 
    all occurring within a relatively short period of time. In contrast, US 
    sales are usually conducted on a made-to-order basis (CEP sales out of 
    inventory being an exception.). The material terms of sale in the US 
    are set on the contract date and any subsequent changes are usually 
    immaterial in nature or, if material, rarely occur. Most importantly, 
    due to the made-to-order nature of US transactions, there is a very 
    long period of time between the contract date, and the subsequent 
    shipment and invoicing of the sale. The long periods between the 
    contract date and invoice/shipment date for US transactions are 
    measured in multiple months with some reaching upwards of six months. 
    As can be seen from the foregoing, ``invoice'' dates in both markets, 
    while the same in name, are materially quite different for purposes of 
    determining price discrimination simply because the sales processes for 
    the two markets are quite different. If we were to use invoice date as 
    the date of sale for both markets, we would effectively be comparing 
    home market sales in any given month to US sales whose material terms 
    were set months earlier-- an inappropriate comparison for purposes of 
    measuring price discrimination in a market with less than very 
    inelastic demand. Notwithstanding the respondents' comment that the 
    terms of sale are subject to change and that, therefore, the final 
    terms are not known until the date of invoice, we find that, in this 
    case, there is no information on the record indicating that the 
    material terms of sale change frequently enough on US sales so as to 
    give both buyers and sellers any expectation that the final terms will 
    differ from those agreed to in the contract. Therefore, we are 
    continuing to use contract date as the date of sale with respect to US 
    sales for these final results, except for CEP sales out of inventory. 
    See also Notice of Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review: Canned Pineapple Fruit From Thailand, 63 FR 7392, 7394 
    (February 13, 1998) (For CEP sales out of inventory, invoice date 
    reasonably approximates the date on which the material terms of sale 
    are set and is, therefore, appropriately used as the date of sale.).
        As for the respondents' additional concern that using a 
    ``different'' date of sale in home market than in the United States 
    would be contrary to the Department's preference of using a single date 
    of sale as articulated in the Preamble to the (see Final Regulations at 
    27348), we find such concern to be unwarranted. Given the sales 
    processes of the different markets, the only dates which are 
    substantively equivalent for purposes of measuring price 
    discrimination, although different in name, are the invoice date in the 
    home market and the contract date in the United States.
    Comment 2: Inclusion of All EP Sales Entered During The POR
        SeAH argues that the Department erroneously excluded from its 
    analysis EP sales entered during the POR but with dates of sale outside 
    the POR. According to SeAH, Sec. 751(a)(2)(A) of the Act requires that 
    the Department examine each entry, as opposed to sale, during the POR 
    by stating:
    
        For the purpose of [administrative reviews of antidumping duty 
    orders], the administering authority shall determine
        (i) the normal value and export price (or constructed export 
    price) of each entry of the subject merchandise * * *
    
        The petitioners counter that the review covers all ``sales'' during 
    the POR as delineated in the questionnaire. According to the 
    petitioners, it is the questionnaire which determines the reporting 
    requirements during a review and the questionnaire clearly stated, 
    ``State the total quantity and value of the merchandise under review 
    that you sold during the period of review'' (see January 13, 1997 
    questionnaire at A-1). As for the language in the statute cited by SeAH 
    in support of a review covering all entries, the petitioners cite to 
    American Permac v. United States, 783 F. Supp. 1421 (CIT 1992) 
    (American Permac) to show that the statute does not preclude the 
    Department from excluding certain sales if they are distortive where it 
    says:
    
        The court has a difficult time reading the ``each entry'' 
    language to compel inclusion of all sales, no matter how distorting 
    or unrepresentative. In actuality, both investigations and periodic 
    reviews examine sales, not entries, and the methodology is not 
    distinguishable in any relevant way.
    
        The petitioners also cite to 19 CFR 353.22(b) and, inter alia, 
    Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews: Portable 
    Electric Typewriters from Japan, (Typewriters from Japan) 56 FR 56393, 
    56397 (November 4, 1991) to show that the Department has the discretion 
    to base administrative reviews on entries, exports or sales.
    Department's Position
        We agree with SeAH that all POR entries of EP sales should be 
    included in our analysis. The petitioners' citation to American Permac 
    does not apply to this case. In that case, the Court was examining the 
    issue of whether or not the Department had the authority to deny a 
    request which did not arise until the hearing to exclude a certain 
    number of US sales from the universe of reported transactions. One of 
    the Department's arguments in American Permac was that it was required 
    by the statute to examine all sales in the reported universe. While the 
    Court based its final decision to uphold the Department's denial of 
    exclusion based on the untimely nature of the exclusion request, it did 
    state that it doubted that Congress ``intended to compel distortions if 
    exclusion of a few sales would remedy the problem'' (see American 
    Permac at 1424). While American Permac does support the authority of 
    the Department to exclude certain US sales from its analysis, it does 
    not address the issue of whether the universe of reported sales is to 
    be based on entries or sales during the POR.
        Section 751(a)(2)(A) of the Act states that a dumping calculation 
    should be performed for each entry during the POR. While the 
    Sec. 353.22(b) of the Department's regulations does give the Department 
    some flexibility in this regard by stating that the review can be based 
    on entries, exports or sales, it is our preference to base the review 
    on entries when possible. In this case, we find no compelling reason to 
    move away from the use of entries to determine the universe of US sales 
    to be reported for EP sales as there are no circumstances on the record 
    that would require such a move. Accordingly, we have included in our 
    analysis for these final results all entries of EP sales during the POR 
    as reported by SeAH. In addition, we have made the same revision in our 
    calculations for all of the other respondents.
    Comment 3: Inaccurate or Missing Conversion Factors
        The petitioners state the respondents have reported some conversion 
    factors for the conversion of home market sales and cost information to 
    a theoretical-weight basis that are below the minimum conversion factor 
    allowable in various grades of standard pipe, as
    
    [[Page 32837]]
    
    determined using maximum industry-standard tolerance of wall thickness. 
    Where no other conversion factor exists for such products, the 
    petitioners propose assigning the highest reported conversion factor 
    among transactions of the same specification. In the event there is no 
    available conversion factor for a particular product, the petitioners 
    argue that Department should not apply any conversion factor.
        Hyundai acknowledges that a few of its conversion factors were 
    calculated incorrectly and requests that the Department allow them to 
    correct this error. Additionally, Hyundai notes that the error did not 
    impact the Preliminary Results as the products with the incorrect 
    conversion factors were not used in calculating the margin.
        KISCO/Union contends that the petitioners' argument refers to the 
    conversion factor between theoretical and standard actual weight, which 
    may differ slightly from the actual weight and that the petitioners 
    have presented no evidence that the conversion factors from actual to 
    theoretical weight fall below the industry-standard. KISCO/Union also 
    states that the home market customers have accepted this merchandise 
    without noting any weight problems. In the case that the Department 
    determines that conversion factors which fall below the industry 
    standards should not be applied, KISCO/Union argues that the Department 
    should substitute the industry standard for the limited number of 
    incorrect conversion factors reported in the response.
        SeAH and Shinho acknowledge that the conversion factors on some 
    home market sales are below the minimum but point to the extremely tiny 
    proportion these sales constitute. In addition, KISCO/Union, SeAH and 
    Shinho state that most of these sales were not used in the Department's 
    calculation for the Preliminary Results.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with the petitioners that what amounts to adverse facts 
    available should be applied to sales with conversion factors below the 
    minimum allowed. Such errors in the respondents' data affect only a 
    minuscule number of transactions and appear to be inadvertent. With 
    respect to KISCO/Union's argument, we agree the conversion factor 
    between the theoretical and standard actual weight may differ from the 
    factor used to convert the actual weight to the theoretical. 
    Nevertheless, we find that certain reported conversion factors at issue 
    are aberrational because it is impossible to produce a pipe that is 
    within the industry-standard tolerances with conversion factor below 
    this minimum. See Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review: Circular Welded Non-Alloy Steel Pipe from the Republic of 
    Korea, (First Review Final Results) 62 FR 55574, 55577 (October 27, 
    1997). Therefore, we have calculated the minimum conversion factor 
    allowable in various grades of standard pipe by using the maximum 
    industry-standard tolerance of wall thickness. We used the calculated 
    minimum factor for those sales and costs where the reported factors 
    fell below the minimum.
    Comment 4: SG&A and Interest Ratios
        The petitioners state that the respondents have calculated their 
    SG&A and interest ratios based on a sales denominator that includes 
    packing. When this ratio is multiplied by a cost of manufacturing (COM) 
    that is exclusive of packing, as was done in the preliminary 
    calculations, the petitioners allege that the resulting SG&A amount is 
    understated. The petitioners suggest that the Department could add 
    packing to the COM before the SG&A and interest expenses are calculated 
    as was done in the First Review Final Results.
        Hyundai agrees with the petitioner that its SG&A ratio was 
    calculated with a packing-inclusive denominator and that packing should 
    be added to COM before calculating SG&A.
        KISCO/Union, SeAH and Shinho state that the addition of packing to 
    the COM prior to calculating SG&A and interest expenses would have only 
    a negligible effect on the margin calculations and is, therefore, not 
    necessary.
    Department's Position
        In the preliminary results we did in fact understate SG&A and 
    interest expenses by multiplying a packing-exclusive COM by expense 
    ratios calculated based on a packing-inclusive amount. For these final 
    results, we have corrected this error by adding packing to the COM 
    before applying the ratios to calculate SG&A and interest expenses.
    Comment 5: Duty Drawback Adjustment
        The petitioners argue that duty drawback rebates received by 
    respondents, except for KISCO/Union, were based on a theoretical weight 
    basis while the payments of the original duties were on an actual 
    weight basis. As a result, the petitioners stated that total rebates 
    received exceed total duties paid. Since the Act allows only for the 
    addition to US price of import duties paid and rebated, the petitioners 
    point out than any adjustment should be capped by the amount of duty 
    actually paid. (See 19 U.S.C. Sec. 1677a(d)(B) (1994).)
        The respondents point out that, contrary to the petitioners' 
    assertions, not all duty drawback rebates are excessive in that two 
    separate programs were used. In particular, state the respondents, 
    rebates under the individual-application system have been found by the 
    Department in previous segments of this proceeding to be non-excessive; 
    therefore, the Department was correct in adjusting US price by the 
    entire amount of the rebate. The respondents note that the Department 
    did limit the duty drawback adjustment to the amount of duties paid on 
    those transactions receiving rebates under the fixed-rate system in the 
    Preliminary Results.
    Department's Position
        As stated in the Preliminary Results at 64561, to the extent that 
    duty drawback rebates are in excess of the actual amount of duties 
    paid, we agree with the petitioners that adjustments to US price should 
    be limited to the amount of duties paid. The respondents received duty 
    drawback under two systems: the fixed rate system and the individual 
    application system. Rebates received under the individual application 
    system are limited to actual duties paid and are not excessive. 
    Therefore, we have used the full amount of rebates under the individual 
    application system in our analysis for these Final Results. Under the 
    fixed rate system, however, rebates exceed actual duties paid (see 
    First Review Final Results). In the Preliminary Results, we did cap the 
    amount of rebates received under the fixed-rate system, where 
    applicable, for all respondents except for SeAH. For these final 
    results, we have applied the cap to SeAH as well.
    Comment 6: Income Offsets to G&A
        The petitioners claim that Hyundai, KISCO/Union and Shinho have 
    understated their G&A expenses by offsetting such expenses by various 
    non-operating income items unrelated to the subject merchandise. Since 
    it is the Department's practice to limit offsets to G&A to income from 
    operations related to the production of subject merchandise, these 
    respondents' offsets should be denied. See, Final Determination of 
    Sales at Not Less Than Fair Value: Saccharin From Korea (Saccharin from 
    Korea) 59 FR 58828 (November 15, 1994) and Certain Fresh Cut Flowers 
    From Colombia: Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews 
    (Flowers from Colombia) 61 FR 42833, 42843 (August 19, 1996).
    
    [[Page 32838]]
    
        Hyundai maintains that its offsets to G&A do relate to the 
    production and sale of subject merchandise. KISCO/Union argues that 
    non-operating expenses should not be included in G&A if non-operating 
    income is found not to be an allowable offset. Shinho replies that it 
    has fulfilled the Department's requirement to include only items 
    related to production in its G&A offset.
    Department's Position
        The Department permits offsets to G&A expenses for income earned 
    from the company's production operations. During the course of this 
    proceeding, we have received from respondents responses to our original 
    questionnaire and multiple supplemental questionnaires. Based on our 
    examination of these responses with respect to the calculation of G&A 
    expenses and offsets, we are accepting what respondents have provided 
    with the exception of dividend income offsets claimed by Hyundai and 
    KISCO/Union. See U.S. Steel v. United States, Slip Op. 98-17, (CIT 
    February 25, 1998). In particular, we find that the items petitioners 
    complain about appear, on their face, to be of a general nature arising 
    from the companies' operations.
        We are disallowing the offsets to G&A due to dividend income for 
    Hyundai and KISCO/Union. We note that dividend income is generally 
    claimed as an offset to interest expenses and is allowable when such 
    income arises from short-term investments of a company's working 
    capital. However, in this case, we find that Hyundai's and KISCO/
    Union's dividend income has not been shown to be derived from short-
    term investments.
    Comment 7: CV Credit Expenses
        The respondents argue that, in the Preliminary Results, the 
    Department double-counted imputed credit expenses in the calculation of 
    CV. The respondents state that this occurred because the Department 
    included both total actual interest expense and imputed U.S. credit 
    expenses in the CV calculation. The respondents state that it is the 
    Department's practice first to subtract home market imputed credit 
    expenses before adding U.S. imputed credit expenses in calculating a 
    circumstance-of-sale (COS) adjustment for CV. As evidence of this 
    practice, several respondents cite, inter alia, Certain Stainless Steel 
    Wire Rods from France: Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review, (France Wire Rods) 62 FR 7206, 7209, (February 18, 1997).
        The petitioners dispute that the Department double-counted the 
    respondents' imputed credit expenses in CV, and state that the 
    Department calculated CV in accordance with section 773(e) of the Act. 
    However, the petitioners concede that the Department's new-law practice 
    is to make a COS adjustment to NV for differences in credit expenses 
    between the US and exporting country markets.
    Department's Position
        We agree with the petitioners that we calculated CV in accordance 
    with section 773(e) of the Act. However, we also agree with both the 
    petitioners and the respondents that we made an error in our COS 
    adjustments to CV by not deducting home market credit expenses before 
    adding US credit expenses. It is the Department's standard practice to 
    make such an adjustment. See, e.g., France Wire Rods and Stainless 
    Steel Bar From India: Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review, 63 FR 13622, 13624 (March 20, 1998) (Comment 5). We have 
    adjusted the calculations accordingly for these final results.
    
    Company-Specific Comments
    
    Hyundai
    
    Comment 8: Further Processed Merchandise
        Hyundai argues that, in the Preliminary Results, the Department 
    improperly treated sales of subject merchandise that were purchased 
    from unaffiliated suppliers and further processed. In Hyundai's view, 
    US sales of subject merchandise may only be compared to sales of the 
    foreign like product that were produced in the same country by the same 
    person. Hyundai states that if sales data consists of merchandise 
    produced by two different manufacturers, the Department normally 
    compares the sales produced by each company separately. Hyundai cites 
    Steel Wire Rope from the Republic of Korea: Preliminary Results of 
    Antidumping Duty Administrative Review and Intent To Revoke Antidumping 
    Duty Order in Part, 62 FR 64353 (December 5, 1997), noting that 
    respondents sold merchandise in both the US and home market that was 
    produced by the respondent and by unaffiliated suppliers and that the 
    Department compared the merchandise according to producer. Hyundai 
    continues its argument by saying that the further processing of the 
    purchased pipe does not convert the pipe from non-subject to subject 
    merchandise. It maintains that because the pipe was already subject 
    merchandise, the Department must segregate Hyundai's sales into two 
    categories (pipe purchased and further processed by Hyundai, and pipe 
    manufactured by Hyundai) and compare the two categories separately.
        Petitioners argue that the Department's precedent supports treating 
    Hyundai as the producer of the finished products, citing Antifriction 
    Bearings and Parts Thereof from France, 61 FR 66,472 (December 17, 
    1996). In Antifriction Bearings, a respondent purchased finished 
    bearings from an unaffiliated subcontractor and resold them in the home 
    market and United States. According to the petitioners, the Department 
    treated sales of goods not manufactured by a company to be products of 
    that company because the subcontractor did not know the destination of 
    the products, and because the respondent company controlled the 
    production and sale of the product. The petitioners argue that the same 
    facts exist in this case.
    Department's Position
        Because Hyundai engages in what is often substantial further 
    manufacturing and because it sells and warrants the further-processed 
    merchandise as its own product, it is unclear whether the Steel Wire 
    Rope methodology is appropriate in this case. Nevertheless, the issue 
    is moot, as Hyundai was unable to provide the necessary information for 
    us to follow the methodology. In Steel Wire Rope, the specific 
    suppliers of each resold item were identifiable. In this case, the 
    suppliers for specific sales are not known; Hyundai is only able to 
    distinguish whether it manufactured the product from start to finish, 
    or whether it purchased the product before further processing. Thus, 
    even if it were appropriate, the information provided by Hyundai does 
    not allow us to employ the methodology used in Steel Wire Rope.
    Comment 9: Arm's Length Freight
        The petitioners argue that Hyundai did not adequately demonstrate 
    that the transactions between Hyundai and an affiliated transport 
    company were at arm's length. The petitioners state that the Department 
    requested information on the affiliated company's provision of shipping 
    services to non-affiliated customers and that, because Hyundai failed 
    to provide this information, Hyundai's ocean freight rates should be 
    based on facts available. Furthermore, the petitioners note that when 
    the affiliated transport company arranged for third parties to 
    transport the subject merchandise, the affiliate did not charge
    
    [[Page 32839]]
    
    any mark-up, thus providing services for free, suggesting again that 
    the transactions were not arm's length.
        Hyundai rebuts that the information on the record does adequately 
    demonstrate that the transactions were arm's length. Hyundai points to 
    documents which support their claim, such as an invoice and other 
    documents from an unaffiliated company and their affiliate's tariff 
    schedule. Hyundai argues that it is not required to provide information 
    showing that the affiliate charged the same rates to unaffiliated 
    customers. It also notes that it provided the same kind of evidence 
    supplied in Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate from Germany: 
    Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 61 FR 13834 
    (March 28, 1996), in which the Department determined that freight 
    services were provided by an affiliate at arm's length prices. Lastly, 
    Hyundai rejects the petitioners' argument that, because they were not 
    charged a mark-up by the affiliate when arranging services from a third 
    party, the transactions were not arm's length. Hyundai states that the 
    affiliate is often involved in name only and that, regardless of any 
    supposed lack of mark-up, it otherwise demonstrated that the prices 
    paid to its affiliate were comparable to prices charged to unaffiliated 
    parties and thus at arm's length.
    Department's Position
        As stated in the questionnaire issued to the respondents on January 
    13, 1997, ``arm's length transactions are those in which the selling 
    price between the affiliated parties is comparable to the selling 
    prices in transactions involving persons who are not affiliated.'' 
    Hyundai demonstrated that the prices charged by its affiliate were 
    comparable to prices it is charged by unaffiliated freight providers. 
    Hyundai is not required to show that the affiliate charged a third 
    party comparable prices, although this is another way in which arm's 
    length can be demonstrated. The Department never specifically asked 
    Hyundai to supply this kind of information; rather, we suggested it as 
    one option Hyundai could choose to demonstrate arm's length. The fact 
    that the affiliate may at times not charge Hyundai with a mark-up when 
    arranging third party transactions is not in itself demonstrative of a 
    non-arm's length transaction. Rather, the evidence in this case that 
    Hyundai pays the affiliate comparable prices to those paid to 
    unaffiliated providers is sufficient to demonstrate arm's length.
    Comment 10: Additional Freight
        The petitioners find Hyundai's additional freight costs to be 
    unreliable and argue that the Department should deny any adjustment to 
    NV for this additional freight. The petitioners claim that there are 
    several problems with Hyundai's reporting of this expense. They state 
    that Hyundai did not indicate whether the service was provided by an 
    affiliate. They also maintain that Hyundai has not substantiated the 
    claim that it is not able to report these costs on a shipment-specific 
    basis, nor have they explained sufficiently the basis on which the 
    charges are incurred. The petitioners argue that the information on 
    these additional freight costs is unreliable, noting for example a 
    change in the total cost reported from one supplemental response to the 
    next.
        Hyundai responds that it did provide adequate information on the 
    additional freight expenses. It explains that the service in question 
    is not provided by an affiliate and that because these services are not 
    invoiced on a shipment-specific basis they cannot be reported on a 
    shipment-specific basis.
    Department's Position
        After reviewing the information on the record, we see no reason to 
    deny the adjustment. Contrary to the petitioners' claims, the loading 
    service was not provided by an affiliate. Further, the way in which 
    Hyundai incurs this cost prohibits shipment-specific reporting.
    Comment 11: Export Price Adjustment
        Petitioners assert that the Department should deduct certain 
    expenses that they claim relate to movement (e.g., communication costs 
    and markups) incurred by Hyundai's U.S. affiliates from export price 
    under section 772(c)(2)(A)of the Act. According to the petitioners, 
    these costs are incident to bringing the subject merchandise from Korea 
    to delivery in the United States, and thus should be deducted from U.S. 
    price. Because Hyundai has not reported all of these expenses in its 
    response, petitioners advocate that we should apply, as facts 
    available, a factor based on the affiliates' SG&A rates.
        Hyundai argues that because its sales to the United States are 
    export price sales, the specific expenses discussed by petitioner 
    cannot be deducted.
    Department's Position
        Pursuant to section 772(c)(2)(A) of the statute, the export price 
    is to be reduced by any additional costs, charges, or expenses which 
    are incident to bringing the subject merchandise from the exporting 
    country to the United States. In this case, the Department has made the 
    appropriate movement-related reductions to export price by deducting 
    the costs incurred for moving the subject merchandise from Korea to the 
    customer in the United States. In accordance with our normal practice, 
    these costs included brokerage and handling, marine insurance, 
    international freight, U.S. brokerage and wharfage, and inland freight 
    charges incurred in both countries. The Department does not consider 
    the type of expenses that the petitioners ask us to deduct from export 
    price as costs that are incident to bringing the subject merchandise 
    from Korea to the place of delivery in the United States.
    Comment 12: Overstatement of Inventory Carrying Cost
        The petitioners state that rather than using the cost reported in 
    the inventory records, Hyundai incorrectly used sales value when 
    computing the inventory carrying cost adjustment. They assert that the 
    reported adjustment should be recalculated downward to compensate for 
    this difference.
        Hyundai argues that it calculated the adjustment correctly, basing 
    inventory carrying cost on production cost, not sales value.
    Department's Position
        We agree with the petitioners that Hyundai's reported inventory 
    carrying cost adjustment is overstated. Upon examination of the record, 
    we are unable to substantiate the inventory carrying cost adjustment as 
    reported by Hyundai. It is not clear on what basis, value or cost, the 
    adjustment was calculated. In fact, Hyundai states in its original 
    response that it calculated the adjustment by using the ``value'' of 
    the inventoried merchandise. The Department requested that the 
    respondents calculate inventory carrying cost adjustment based on the 
    opportunity cost to maintain inventory, noting that the cost is 
    normally calculated by using the merchandise's cost or acquisition 
    price. Because Hyundai's inventory carrying cost adjustment is 
    overstated, we have recalculated this adjustment based on Hyundai's 
    reported COM.
    Comment 13: Erroneous Coding
        The petitioners note that Hyundai reported inland freight charges 
    on some home market FOB sales. They state that the Department should 
    deny any freight adjustment for these sales, but still reduce COP by 
    the amount of the claimed adjustment.
        The respondent notes that these sales were incorrectly coded and 
    should have been reported delivered, not FOB.
    
    [[Page 32840]]
    
    Department's Position
        We agree with Hyundai and have corrected the database for more 
    minor errors in reporting. Further, we find no reason to apply an 
    adverse inference to these transactions, as petitioners request.
    
    KISCO/Union
    
    Comment 14: Collapsing of Kisco and Union
        KISCO/Union argues that the Department should reverse its decision 
    to ``collapse'' Union and KISCO and should instead calculate individual 
    dumping margins for each company based on the respective sales and cost 
    data, for the reasons set forth in previously submitted comments by 
    Union and KISCO on September 5, 1997 and September 11, 1997.
        The petitioners first note that KISCO/Union's comment, other than a 
    reference to their previous submissions, presents no new arguments on 
    this issue. As such, the petitioners contend that KISCO/Union's comment 
    may not be considered, in accordance with section 353.38(c)(2) of the 
    Department's regulations which require that the case brief shall 
    separately present in full all arguments believed to be relevant to the 
    final results, ``including any arguments presented before the date of 
    publication of the preliminary determination or preliminary results.'' 
    In case the Department chooses to reconsider Union and KISCO's previous 
    submissions on this issue, the petitioners argue that there is 
    overwhelming evidence that supports the Department's collapsing 
    decision, discussed in the petitioners' previously submitted comments 
    on October 16, 1997 and October 20, 1997.
    Department's Position
        For reasons discussed in our Preliminary Results, we continue to 
    find that it is appropriate to collapse Union and KISCO.
    Comment 15: Kisco and Union's Collapsed Data
        On October 22, 1997, the Department instructed KISCO/Union to 
    resubmit its cost and sales data on a consolidated basis. The 
    petitioners argue that KISCO/Union failed to do this properly. First, 
    the petitioners state that KISCO/Union's methodology of weighing each 
    field in the COP and CV databases by the production quantity in each 
    company's response creates varying G&A factors depending on each 
    company's production quantity of each product. The petitioners argue 
    that the Department should recalculate G&A expenses such that a single 
    entity-wide factor is applied to the weighted average cost of 
    manufacture or base KISCO/Union's G&A ratio on facts available. 
    According to the petitioners, a similar distortion is created for all 
    adjustments to NV or export price, such as indirect selling expenses 
    and all imputed expenses, that were based on individual company data 
    instead of aggregated data.
        KISCO/Union first notes that the manner in which it reported its 
    data is materially identical to the methodology used by the Department 
    in the First Review Final Results, which was not challenged by the 
    petitioners. KISCO/Union disagrees with the petitioners' argument 
    relating to price adjustments, movement charges, and selling expenses, 
    arguing the Department's longstanding practice is to calculate such 
    adjustments as specifically as possible, which it claims was already 
    done in the individual companies' responses. Given such policy, KISCO/
    Union further argues that use of a single indirect selling expense 
    ratio is inappropriate because KISCO and Union's sales are handled by 
    completely separate sales departments within their respective 
    companies, each with their own expenses. With respect to the 
    petitioners' arguments relating to the calculation of G&A and interest 
    expense, KISCO/Union contends recalculation is unnecessary because the 
    petitioners have failed to demonstrate that any material distortion 
    arose from the methodology used by it. Alternatively, KISCO/Union 
    states that the recalculation of G&A and interest expense on an entity-
    wide basis can be performed using data already on the record and do not 
    require use of facts available.
    Department's Position
        We agree with the petitioners in part. Because the Department has 
    decided to collapse Union and KISCO and thus treat the two companies as 
    a single entity for purposes of calculating the dumping margin, we find 
    that G&A, interest expense, indirect selling expense ratio and interest 
    rate should be calculated on an entity-wide basis. We note that the 
    methodology employed by the Department in the First Review Final 
    Results was limited by the information that was available on the record 
    in that proceeding.
        For these final results, we have recalculated G&A by adding the G&A 
    expenses from Union and KISCO and dividing this sum by the total sum of 
    cost of goods sold for the two companies. With respect to interest 
    expenses for companies that are part of a consolidated group, the 
    Department's policy is to base the interest expense calculation on the 
    consolidated financial statements of the group. Because Union and KISCO 
    are part of the Dongkuk Steel Mill Group (DSM group), the interest 
    expense for the collapsed entity of KISCO/Union should also be based on 
    the consolidated financial statement of that group. As pointed out by 
    KISCO/Union, however, Union is not included in the consolidated DSM 
    statements. Accordingly, we have re-calculated the interest expense on 
    an entity-wide basis by adding the net interest expense of the DSM 
    group with that of Union and dividing by the total cost of goods sold 
    for the combined DSM group and Union. To calculate a collapsed home 
    market indirect selling expense ratio, we divided the combined indirect 
    selling expenses of Union and KISCO by the combined total domestic 
    sales value of both companies. We also have re-calculated all imputed 
    expenses, including credit expenses and inventory carrying costs, using 
    the weighted-average interest rate for the collapsed entity.
        With respect to other adjustments to price and NV or movement 
    charges, we used the information provided because such items were 
    reported properly by KISCO/Union.
    Comment 16: Consistency of COP and CV Data
        The petitioners argue that KISCO/Union has reported inconsistent 
    COP and CV data in their collapsed data. In one instance, the 
    petitioners state that the underlying components of total COM differ 
    between the COP and CV databases but the total is the same. The 
    petitioners also note that the production quantities for many products 
    differ between the two databases. The petitioners assert that KISCO/
    Union has not provided sufficient explanation of its methodology to 
    account for such variations and as such, the Department must base its 
    final results on facts available.
        KISCO/Union acknowledges that the databases do contain differences 
    but contend that they can be corrected easily. This error occurred when 
    products were sold only in one market. With respect to the one instance 
    where the cost fields varied while the total COM remained the same, 
    KISCO/Union explains that the discrepancy resulted when the conversion 
    factor for converting from an actual weight basis to a theoretical 
    weight basis was inadvertently applied twice to the costs but not to 
    the total COM itself. KISCO/Union argues that because only total
    
    [[Page 32841]]
    
    COM is used in the Department's dumping margin calculation, the error 
    has no effect on the margin calculation.
    Department's Position
        We have examined KISCO/Union's collapsed data and are satisfied 
    that the discrepancies resulted from simple ministerial errors. We also 
    find that KISCO/Union's error in applying the conversion factor does 
    not affect the Department's calculations. For these final results, we 
    corrected the databases and calculated weight-averaged total COMs using 
    the combined cost components and production quantities.
    Comment 17: Interest Expenses
        The petitioners contend that KISCO failed to demonstrate that the 
    ``interest from short-term securities,'' reported in DSM financial 
    statement, was a proper offset to interest expenses. The petitioners 
    further argue that KISCO/Union failed to show why it did not account 
    for the foreign exchange and translation gains and losses as reported 
    in DSM's financial statements. Because KISCO/Union did not provide an 
    explanation that such gains and losses are unrelated to DSM's purchase 
    transactions or borrowing cost, petitioners urge that the Department 
    should include those items in the calculation of interest expenses.
        KISCO/Union counters that the petitioners' argument does not apply 
    because the calculation of its combined interest expense was not based 
    on the DSM consolidated financial statements. Instead, KISCO/Union 
    explains that the collapsed data reported a weighted-average interest 
    expense by product, based on the company-specific interest expense. 
    KISCO/Union states that the use of interest rates based on the DSM 
    statements would be inappropriate because Union is not included within 
    the consolidated DSM statements.
        With respect to foreign currency translation gains and losses, 
    KISCO/Union argues that the Department has previously held that such 
    items are properly included in G&A expenses, which are calculated at 
    the level of the operating companies, rather than interest expense, 
    which may be calculated at the level of the consolidated group of 
    companies. Accordingly, KISCO/Union contends that because DSM is itself 
    an operating company, its G&A expenses should be assigned to its own 
    production alone unless they are shown to be attributable to subject 
    merchandise or foreign like product.
    Department's Position
        As discussed in Comment 15, we calculated an entity-wide net 
    interest expense factor for KISCO/Union by combining Union's net 
    interest expense with the net interest expense from DSM's consolidated 
    income statement. Contrary to petitioners' argument, we find no basis 
    on which to exclude DSM's interest income as a reduction in the 
    company's interest expense. In fact, DSM's consolidated financial 
    statements identify the income amounts as having been earned by the 
    company from its investments in short-term securities. See, Final 
    Results of Administrative Review of Porcelain-on-Steel Cooking Ware 
    from Mexico, 61 FR 54,616, 54,621 (October 21, 1996) (describing the 
    Department's practice, in calculating COP and CV, of reducing 
    respondent's interest expense by interest income earned from short-term 
    investments).
        With respect to the net foreign currency exchange loss reported in 
    DSM's consolidated financial statements, we have included this amount 
    in our calculation of KISCO/Union's combined net interest expense. As 
    noted by petitioners, KISCO/Union did not explain why it did not 
    account for any of DSM's foreign exchange gains or losses in 
    calculating COP and CV. Rather, KISCO/Union stated that it excluded 
    these amounts from costs because they were properly categorized as G&A 
    expenses. In past antidumping cases, however, the Department has 
    treated the gains and losses arising from the restatement of foreign 
    currency debt as part of the respondent's net financing costs. See, 
    Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Static 
    Random Access Memory Semiconductors from Korea, 63 FR 8934, 8940 
    (February 23, 1998) (where the Department treated foreign exchange 
    losses on long-term debt as part of interest expense). Here, DSM's 
    consolidated financial statements report that the group holds loans 
    denominated in foreign currencies. DSM, however, did not attribute to 
    its net financing costs any of the foreign exchange gain or loss 
    resulting from restatement of these loan balances. Therefore, for the 
    final results, we have recalculated KISCO/Union's financial expense to 
    include the net foreign exchange loss reported in DSM's consolidated 
    income statement as non-adverse facts available.
    Comment 18: Indirect Selling Expenses
        The petitioners argue that Union's indirect selling expense ratio 
    must be recalculated before being collapsed with KISCO's data. 
    Specifically, they claim Union has misallocated its home market 
    indirect selling expenses on the basis of percentage of employees 
    involved in domestic sales compared to export sales or sales 
    administration. Instead, the petitioners claim that the Department, in 
    accordance with its normal practice, should allocate such expenses 
    based on costs of sales in each market.
        KISCO/Union contends that the Department has accepted Union's 
    allocation methodology in every previous review involving Union and has 
    no reason to depart from the past practice in the present proceeding.
    Department's Position
        Where transaction-specific reporting is not feasible, the 
    Department's general practice is to allow companies to allocate 
    expenses, provided that the allocation method used does not cause 
    inaccuracies or distortions. See Statement of Administrative Action, 
    (SAA), H.R. Doc. No. 103-316, vol. 1 (1994) at 153-154. Whether a 
    particular allocation methodology used is reasonable is determined on a 
    case-by-case basis. In this instance, we find Union's methodology of 
    allocating its indirect selling expenses based on the number of 
    employees may cause inaccurate results because a large portion of the 
    indirect selling expenses were not incurred based on the number of 
    employees. Therefore, we have recalculated Union's indirect selling 
    expense by allocating the total expense on the basis of percentage of 
    domestic sales to total sales.
    Comment 19: Union's Freight Forwarder
        The petitioners argue that Union failed to demonstrate that its 
    transactions with Kukje Transportation, Union's affiliated freight 
    forwarder, were at arm's length prices. The petitioners state that the 
    sample trucking lists provided by Union do not show that the prices 
    charged by Kukje were comparable with those charged by an unaffiliated 
    freight forwarder. Specifically, the petitioners claim that the freight 
    fee schedule does not show that the prices were based on the same 
    destination and that schedule does not identify the trucking firm to 
    which it applies. Accordingly, the petitioners urge the Department to 
    calculate Union's freight forwarding expenses based on facts available.
        KISCO/Union contends that the destination codes in the freight fee 
    schedule that Union provided show clearly that the rates were based on 
    the same destination, and demonstrate that identical rates were charged 
    to affiliated and unaffiliated parties. KISCO/Union also points out 
    that the name of the
    
    [[Page 32842]]
    
    trucking firm was clearly identified and the higher rate applies to a 
    later time.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with the petitioners. Upon a careful examination of the 
    information submitted by Union regarding its transactions with Kukje, 
    we find there is sufficient evidence to demonstrate that the 
    transactions were at arm's length. The sample trucking lists and fee 
    schedules, which clearly identify the destination codes and the name of 
    the unaffiliated trucking firm, demonstrate that the prices charged by 
    Kukje were comparable to that charged by unaffiliated firms.
    Comment 20: Home Market Credit Period For Letter-of-Credit Sales
        The petitioners argue that the Department should deny KISCO/Union's 
    claim for credit expenses for ``cash'' sales in the home market for the 
    time period when Union must submit appropriate shipment documents for 
    review by the bank before payments can be credited to Union's account. 
    The petitioners state that the adjustment must be denied because there 
    is no evidence that the check or local letter of credit is not 
    negotiable by Union upon receipt. According to the petitioners, Union's 
    claimed adjustment actually constitutes an imputed credit expense for 
    that waiting period involved in clearing check or local letter of 
    credit deposits. The petitioners argue that because there is no 
    indication that a similar waiting period is included in calculating 
    Union's credit expenses on US sales, the claim must be rejected.
        KISCO/Union asserts that there is no support for the petitioners' 
    claim that the adjustment represents an imputed credit expense for the 
    waiting period for clearing check deposits. KISCO/Union clarifies that 
    ``cash'' sales simply refer to local letter of credit sales. KISCO/
    Union states that Union has merely calculated the credit expenses 
    associated with the period from the date merchandise is shipped to the 
    date that Union actually receives payment by negotiating the shipping 
    documents. KISCO/Union points out that the Department has previously 
    adjusted for the credit expense incurred in such sales in the First 
    Review Final Results and in other cases in which Union was a 
    respondent.
    Department's Position
        We agree with KISCO/Union. We normally adjust for imputed credit 
    expense to account for the opportunity cost associated with the period 
    of time between shipment and payment. Because payment by the bank is 
    not made until the required documents are presented by Union, an 
    adjustment for imputed credit expense for the waiting period is proper. 
    We have no reason to believe that the letter of credit is actually 
    negotiable upon receipt.
    Comment 21: Union's Warehousing Expenses
        The petitioners contend that Union's reported pre- and post-sale 
    warehousing costs are overstated. They argue that these costs should be 
    calculated by applying the ratio between the volume of pipe warehoused 
    for a specific sale and the total volume of all other products 
    warehoused, whether as inventory or in connection with specific sales. 
    The petitioners argue that the adjustment must be denied because there 
    is no information on the record to determine what share of total 
    warehousing labor and identifiable costs were incurred as direct 
    warehousing costs.
        KISCO/Union counters that pursuant to the URAA, warehousing is 
    treated as a movement expense without drawing a distinction between 
    direct and indirect expenses. Further, KISCO/Union contends that the 
    Department has repeatedly accepted Union's allocation methodology in 
    the past reviews and there is no evidence that a volume-based 
    allocation methodology should be used instead.
    Department's Position
        We agree with KISCO/Union. KISCO/Union is correct in stating under 
    the URAA, home market movement charges, which include warehousing 
    expenses, are to be deducted from NV regardless of the direct or 
    indirect nature of the expenses. See section 773(a)(6)(B)(ii) of the 
    Act. In general, all warehousing expenses that are incurred after the 
    merchandise leaves the original place of shipment are considered as 
    movement expenses. See, e.g., Certain Cold-Rolled and Corrosion 
    Resistant Carbon Steel Flat Products From Korea: Final Results of 
    Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews, 63 FR 13170, 13179 (March 18, 
    1998). Here, the original place of shipment is Union's Pusan plant and 
    the warehouse is located in Seoul. Because these warehousing expenses 
    are incurred after leaving the original place of shipment, we consider 
    the expenses proper movement charges.
        Where transaction-specific reporting is not feasible, the 
    Department's general practice is to allow companies to allocate 
    expenses, provided that the allocation method used does not cause 
    inaccuracies or distortions. See SAA at 153-154. Whether a particular 
    allocation methodology used is reasonable is determined on a case-by-
    case basis. In this instance, we find that there is no evidence to 
    indicate that the allocation methodology used by KISCO/Union causes 
    inaccuracies or distortions.
    Comment 22: Duty Drawback
        The petitioners claim that based on the reported total weight of 
    hot-rolled coil imported during the POR the amount of duty drawback 
    reported by KISCO on US sales appears to be excessive when compared to 
    import duties included in CV. The petitioners argue that in the First 
    Review Final Results the Department adjusted the US price only by the 
    amount of duties actually included in the product. Using the same 
    argument, the petitioners contend that because the CV is intended to 
    value merchandise exported to the United States, the actual amount of 
    duties included in the exported product for CV purposes should be equal 
    to the amount of duties paid on the imported inputs as reported in CV. 
    Accordingly, the petitioners state that where NV is based on CV, the 
    Department must reduce the amount of duty drawback to that reported in 
    CV, or in the alternative, lower CV by the amount of duties and make no 
    adjustment for duty drawback.
        KISCO/Union first points out that duty drawback is received on the 
    amount of imported coil incorporated into merchandise exported by KISCO 
    during the POR, rather than the amount of coil imported during the POR. 
    KISCO/Union explains that because the duty drawback system in Korea 
    permits refunds of duties for merchandise exported up to two years 
    after importation, KISCO was entitled to receive duty drawback during 
    the POR on coil imported before the POR. KISCO/Union argues that the 
    amount of duties included in the exported product is the actual amount 
    and cannot be made to vary depending on the comparison NV. Citing 
    Avesta Sheffield, Inc. v. United States, 838 F. Supp. 608 (CIT 1993), 
    KISCO/Union states that it is well-established that the duty drawback 
    adjustment is not limited by the amount of duties included in NV.
    Department's Position
        Pursuant to section 772(c)(1)(B) of the Act, the Department is 
    required to adjust the EP and CEP by the amount of duty drawback 
    received on the imported inputs. As we stated in the First Review Final 
    Results, the amount of the adjustment is limited to the amount of 
    duties actually paid on the input of the exported product. Because both 
    Union and KISCO have received duty drawback under the individual-
    
    [[Page 32843]]
    
    transaction provision of the Korean duty drawback law, there is no 
    reason to believe that the duty drawback reported reflects an amount 
    other than the actual duties paid (see comment 5 above).
        We disagree with the petitioners' contention that the amount of 
    duties included in CV should be equal to the amount of actual duties 
    paid on the imported inputs. As held by the CIT, the Department is not 
    required to limit the drawback adjustment by an average rate of duty 
    for all raw materials utilized. See Avesta, 838 F. Supp. at 612 (``As 
    concerns either raw materials or sales, there is no requirement that 
    ITA match overall rebates to overall duties to achieve balanced numbers 
    on both sides of the comparison.''). No changes to the duty drawback 
    adjustment are therefore necessary for KISCO/Union.
    Comment 23: Packing Costs
        The petitioners argue that the Department should reject KISCO's 
    packing costs because they are unexplained and distortive. The 
    petitioners contend that KISCO did not submit any supporting 
    documentation for packing costs charged by subcontractors that would 
    explain how costs were derived. In particular, the petitioners object 
    to KISCO's calculation of thinner and lacquer costs and suggest that 
    KISCO has ``simply posit(ed)'' a per-unit cost of thinner and lacquer. 
    Furthermore, the petitioners assert that KISCO's methodology of 
    allocating packing costs, including costs for thinner and lacquer, tags 
    or bands, on the basis of the number of bundles or tonnage packed is 
    unreasonable because such costs vary depending on pipe thickness or the 
    surface area of the particular product. The petitioners argue that 
    these alleged problems provide more reasons to base the final results 
    on facts available.
        With respect to KISCO's allocation methodology, KISCO/Union states 
    that the petitioners' argument is ``speculative and trivial'' in terms 
    of costs involved, and also asserts that the same packing cost 
    methodology was verified and accepted by the Department in the First 
    Review Final Results. KISCO/Union points out that KISCO was never 
    requested to provide copies of subcontractor fees schedules or related 
    documents. KISCO/Union also argues that KISCO's original questionnaire 
    response clearly shows that the per-unit cost of lacquer and thinner 
    was calculated by dividing the total cost of materials by the total 
    quantity packed during the period.
    Department's Position
        Although KISCO did not submit any supporting documentation for its 
    packing costs charged by subcontractors, use of facts available would 
    be clearly inappropriate in this case where the information was never 
    requested specifically by the Department. Moreover, there is no 
    evidence on the record that would indicate that the packing costs 
    provided by KISCO and the allocation methodology used by it are 
    inaccurate or distortive. With respect to the allocation of lacquer and 
    thinner costs, KISCO's response clearly shows that the per-unit cost 
    was properly calculated by dividing the total cost of materials by the 
    total quantity packed during the period. Moreover, the petitioners have 
    provided no evidence that variations in the pipe thickness or surface 
    area of the particular product, if any, would have more than an 
    insignificant effect on the per-unit cost.
    Comment 24: Loading Charges
        The petitioners contend that KISCO failed to respond adequately to 
    the Department's inquiry regarding KISCO's affiliated company, Chunyang 
    Transportation Company (``Chunyang''). The petitioners assert that 
    despite the Department's request to provide evidence demonstrating the 
    arm's length nature of the transactions between KISCO and Chunyang, 
    KISCO failed to do so by merely submitting Chunyang's fee schedule for 
    KISCO without any other evidence of comparable fees charged by 
    unaffiliated parties. Consequently, the petitioners argue that KISCO's 
    loading charges must be based on facts available.
        KISCO/Union counters that KISCO could not provide other evidence of 
    comparable fees because KISCO and Chunyang dealt exclusively with each 
    other during the POR. Therefore, KISCO/Union asserts that by providing 
    Chunyang's fee schedule, KISCO provided all of the information 
    available to it. Further, KISCO/Union claims that in the First Review 
    Final Results, the same documentation was accepted by the Department as 
    evidence of arm's length nature of transactions, without protest by the 
    petitioners. KISCO/Union also notes that the Department did not find 
    any indications of less than arm's length dealings in the verification 
    of the First Review Final Results. As such, KISCO/Union argues that the 
    use of facts available is unwarranted.
    Department's Position
        We agree with the petitioners. There is no evidence supporting 
    KISCO's claim that its transactions with Chunyang for this period of 
    review were at arm's-length. As such, the Department has no way of 
    establishing that the prices charged to KISCO are at arm's-length. In 
    the absence of price information, KISCO should have provided 
    information relating to the costs of Chunyang. Since KISCO did not 
    provide this information, we find that the use of facts otherwise 
    available is appropriate pursuant section 776(a)(1) of the Act. As 
    facts available, we have used the highest reported rate of loading 
    charges of all the respondents in the present review, which has 
    resulted in the use of KISCO's own charges.
    Comment 25: Double-Counting of Inventory Carrying Costs
        KISCO/Union claims that the Department erroneously double-counted 
    inventory carrying cost for purposes of the cost test and in the 
    calculation of CV. According to KISCO/Union, inventory carrying cost is 
    deducted in the calculation of net price in the cost test of the margin 
    program but the COP to which the net price is compared includes total 
    actual interest expense and therefore includes imputed inventory 
    carrying cost. Consequently, KISCO/Union argues that the Department's 
    calculations unfairly compares a net price for home market sales that 
    does not include imputed inventory carrying cost to a COP that does. 
    KISCO/Union asserts that because the Department's current policy is to 
    make no deductions for imputed expenses (i.e., imputed credit and 
    inventory carrying costs) in calculating the net home market price for 
    the cost test, the program must be corrected so that inventory carrying 
    cost is not deducted in the calculation of net price to be compared to 
    COP. Similarly, KISCO/Union argues that the Department double-counted 
    inventory carrying cost in the calculation of CV by including both 
    total actual interest with no offset for imputed expenses, and indirect 
    selling expenses inclusive of inventory carrying cost.
        The petitioners counter that the Department was correct to add 
    imputed inventory carrying costs in COP and CV. The petitioners contend 
    that the actual net interest expense included in COP and CV does not 
    include imputed interest expenses for inventory carrying costs, which 
    represents an opportunity cost that is not reflected in the actual 
    interest expenses of the company. Therefore, the petitioners state that 
    the Department correctly deducted inventory carrying costs from net 
    price before comparison to COP and correctly included inventory 
    carrying costs in CV.
    
    [[Page 32844]]
    
    Department's Position
        We agree with KISCO/Union and have corrected our program to remove 
    the deduction of inventory carrying cost from the net price to be 
    compared with COP and in from the build up of CV. As for the 
    petitioners argument that inventory carrying costs are not included in 
    a company's interest expense, we note that a company's ``interest'' 
    expenses will include, among other items, cost that it incurs in 
    financing its inventory. While such costs are not directly calculated 
    as imputed expenses and directly entered into the company's books, they 
    are, nonetheless, costs that are covered by its financing expenses.
    
    SeAH
    
    Comment 26: Duty Drawback Adjustment
        The petitioners contend that SeAH can report duty drawback on a 
    sales-specific basis, but point out that SeAH has asked for the duty 
    drawback adjustment to be made on the basis of an average amount 
    allocated across all US sales. The petitioners request that this duty 
    drawback adjustment be denied.
        SeAH states that it provided transaction-specific data in general, 
    but could only provide an average for CEP sales because these sales 
    could not be linked to individual shipments. SeAH notes that in the 
    LTFV investigation and in the Preliminary Results, the Department 
    accepted the average as a reasonable methodology for calculating duty 
    drawback.
    Department's Position
        We find that where a respondent cannot report transactions-specific 
    adjustments, reasonable allocations are acceptable. Here, SeAH has 
    calculated average POR amounts for duty drawback on its CEP sales since 
    it is unable to link shipments to subsequent sales. For CEP sales, we 
    find SeAH's methodology to be reasonable.
    Comment 27: US Duty, Brokerage, and Handling on CEP Sales
        The petitioners argue that SeAH should not be allowed to allocate 
    US Duty, Brokerage, and Handling on CEP sales. Because SeAH has 
    reported these foreign charges on an average weight basis, rather than 
    the value basis in which they were incurred, and because the statute 
    requires that margins be calculated on a sale-specific basis (see 19 
    U.S.C. Sec. 1675(a)(2)(A)), the petitioner contends that we should not 
    accept the allocations. The petitioners suggest a facts available rate 
    of the highest rate for any EP sale of that product or the highest rate 
    reported for any sale for each expense where EP sales data is not 
    available.
        SeAH states that it is not able to link inventory sales to original 
    shipments and therefore must report the charges in question on an 
    average basis. SeAH emphasizes that while it may be theoretically 
    possible to link imports of subject merchandise with the reported sale, 
    neither SeAH nor its affiliates maintain their sales data in this way. 
    A link could only be found if done manually. SeAH insists that this 
    methodology was used in the LTFV investigation and has not been further 
    questioned by the Department.
    Department's Position
        We find that SeAH's reporting of US Duty, Brokerage, and Handling 
    as allocations on CEP sales is reasonable, in that CEP sales can not be 
    linked to shipment-specific information for these expenses. We agree 
    with the petitioner, however, in that the allocation for US Duty and 
    Brokerage on volume is distortive because it is not on the same basis 
    in which it is incurred. For these final results, we have reallocated 
    US Duty and Brokerage based on value for CEP sales because these 
    expenses are incurred on a value basis. We will continue to accept the 
    allocation of Handling because it is incurred on a weight basis.
    Comment 28: International Freight
        The petitioners suggest that SeAH's international freight expenses 
    should be based on facts available because SeAH has failed to support 
    its ocean freight expenses and the information in the responses is 
    inconsistent. The petitioners suggest that the Department use an 
    adverse facts available rate based on the highest rate charged for any 
    single shipment.
        SeAH reexamined its response and found that though their source 
    documents and data presented are correct, several of their sample 
    calculations were incorrectly presented. SeAH insists that this was an 
    error only in the sample calculation attachments and not in the sales 
    databases. In addition, SeAH has provided in an attachment to the 
    rebuttal brief a sales trace showing the correct amounts.
    Department's Position
        While there were several clerical errors in the sample 
    calculations, the source documents and data support the amounts 
    reported by SeAH for international freight expenses. Accordingly, we 
    have not made any changes to SeAH's reported international freight 
    expenses.
    Comment 29: US Packing Costs
        The petitioners suggest that SeAH's US packing costs should be 
    based on facts available because SeAH has ignored the Department's 
    requests to provide information on the type of packing materials used, 
    as well as the average labor hours by packing type and the average 
    labor cost per hour. The petitioners also point out that SeAH has 
    failed to provide a list of overhead expenses incurred in packing or to 
    demonstrate how these expenses were allocated in each packing type. The 
    petitioners insist that SeAH should have provided a better explanation 
    of why it cannot calculate the amount of packing material used for each 
    product as well as the methods used to derive the packing labor costs. 
    The petitioners suggest a facts available rate of the highest packing 
    cost for any product reported by SeAH for US sales and the lowest 
    reported for home market sales.
        SeAH contends that it has provided in its responses the basis for 
    each packing calculation by calculating the packing costs on a metric 
    ton basis, distinguishing between domestic and export markets, black 
    and galvanized pipe, outside diameter dimension categories, and 
    standard and conduit pipe. SeAH argues that because packing labor costs 
    were consistent with the fee schedule of its subcontractors, they 
    should be acceptable. SeAH insists that the allocation of material 
    costs on a metric-ton basis is appropriate because these costs were 
    based on the actual average per metric ton of materials used during the 
    POR, depending on the type of pipe and its destination.
    Department's Position
        We agree with SeAH that its methodology for reporting packing costs 
    is reasonable because it has allocated the costs on the basis on which 
    they are incurred. This methodology has been accepted in prior segments 
    of this review. We have no reason to believe, based on the information 
    on the record, that the reported costs are unreliable.
    Comment 30: Affiliated Producers' Costs
        The petitioners find that SeAH's reported costs should be rejected 
    because it has failed to report the costs of certain affiliated 
    producers. The petitioners describe the decision by SeAH not to report 
    these costs as ``unilateral'', and suggest that SeAH has not reported 
    direct materials, labor, and other costs incurred to produce the 
    merchandise under review. The petitioners find that products
    
    [[Page 32845]]
    
    manufactured by affiliated producers are a significant portion of the 
    total merchandise produced and sold in the home market, and would have 
    been a more significant portion if home market sales reporting had not 
    be limited to merchandise comparable to that sold in the United States. 
    The petitioners point out that excluding some costs from reporting can 
    cause a large number of additional sales to fall below cost and result 
    in a substantial increase in the use of CV, which can have a 
    significant effect on the margin calculated. The petitioners suggest 
    that the Department reject SeAH's CV and COP information.
        SeAH responds by claiming that the decision not to report the costs 
    in question was not ``unilateral'' because the Department agreed that 
    SeAH did not have to report these costs. SeAH reiterates that the costs 
    of the affiliated producers are minimal compared to SeAH's total costs 
    and would have no impact on the reported COM. SeAH also notes that the 
    petitioners' suggestion that not all of the merchandise produced by 
    affiliated producers has been reported is unsubstantiated. According to 
    SeAH, comparison merchandise has been distinguished from non-comparison 
    merchandise in it responses. As for the inclusion of the affiliated 
    producers' general expenses in calculating general expenses for SeAH, 
    SeAH argues that these expenses apply to very few models and would have 
    no impact on the CV.
    Department's Position
        In the course of this proceeding, we informed SeAH that it need not 
    report costs for its affiliated producers pending the examination of 
    information on their percentage of SeAH's production by model type (see 
    Memorandum to the File, from IA analyst/Marian Wells, November 18, 
    1997). Upon examining information submitted by SeAH on the percentage 
    of production by the affiliated producer, we decided not to request 
    these costs for purposes of this review. For any given model, the 
    affiliated producer's percentage of production was small compared to 
    SeAH's production; as a result; including the costs of this affiliated 
    producer would have had almost no effect on our calculations.
    Comment 31: Indirect Selling Expenses and ISE Ratio
        The petitioners claim that SeAH did not include several expenses in 
    its reporting of indirect selling expenses. The petitioners provide 
    specific examples of indirect selling expenses for SeAH's affiliated 
    resellers that were not fully explained or appear to be inconsistent 
    with SeAH's financial statements.
        SeAH responds to the petitioners' allegations by stating that it 
    has reported all incurred expenses either as SG&A or, if they fit the 
    criteria, as movement expenses reported as outbound freight or direct 
    selling expenses. SeAH notes that the Department has accepted its 
    reporting methodology since the beginning of the case.
    Department's Position
        All of SeAH's expenses are identified and there is nothing on the 
    record to indicate that these expenses have been mischaracterized.
    Comment 32: Inland Freight Costs and Plant-To-Warehouse Freight Costs 
    in G&A
        The petitioners argue that SeAH did not adequately report its 
    inland freight costs concerning freight from the plant to the warehouse 
    and from the plant to the distribution point in its initial submission. 
    When SeAH responded to supplemental questionnaires, the petitioners 
    point out, freight costs and warehousing costs were inconsistent with 
    estimates described in SeAH's initial response. For example, SeAH 
    initially stated that it shipped pipe from the factory to the Pohang 
    warehouse only occasionally. Later, SeAH found that it actually shipped 
    much more frequently than previously reported. Because of 
    inconsistencies like this one, the petitioners suggest that SeAH's 
    freight and warehousing costs are incomplete and unreliable. According 
    to the petitioners, SeAH has also failed to report inland freight costs 
    on a shipment-by-shipment basis and should therefore be considered non-
    responsive.
        The petitioners maintain that because certain delivery charges have 
    been taken out of SeAH's G&A accounts and there is no indication that 
    they have been accounted for elsewhere, the use of facts available is 
    required. As facts available, the petitioners state that these expenses 
    should be returned to the calculation of G&A, and inland freight costs 
    should be based on facts available and SeAH's plant-to-warehouse 
    freight costs should be added to SeAH's reported G&A expense.
        SeAH states that the petitioners used the last reported home market 
    sales database based on the revised date of sale methodology to 
    calculate the total number and volume of warehoused sales and then 
    compared these figures to the total sales volume in the earlier 
    response with a smaller home market database. This overstated the 
    proportion of domestic sales that were warehoused. This same error by 
    the petitioners led them to overestimate the number of warehoused sales 
    of comparison merchandise. Also, SeAH argues that the calculation of 
    average per metric ton cost was necessary because there is no link 
    between shipments to the warehouse and the sales from the warehouse 
    inventory. Regarding the calculation of the average factory-to-
    warehouse freight charges, SeAH states that the petitioners were in 
    error when they divided (for the sample months) sales shipped by truck 
    only by the total quantity shipped by truck and rail, thus understating 
    the per-ton freight charge. SeAH did this calculation correctly and 
    found that the variance between the annual average and the monthly 
    average was relatively small. Monthly freight charges may contain some 
    variance because freight charges per ton vary by the size/type of truck 
    used. Regarding SG&A charges, SeAH clarifies that the inland freight 
    charge is recorded in its books as an indirect selling expense but was 
    not ``included'' as an indirect selling expense for purposes of 
    responding to the antidumping questionnaire. SeAH maintains that it has 
    excluded all freight from its calculation of indirect selling expenses.
    Department's Position
        We agree with SeAH that the petitioners made errors in their 
    calculations by mixing together information from earlier HM datasets 
    not used for these final results with newer information that was used. 
    We find that SeAH has explained sufficiently how their calculation was 
    performed in regards to each of the petitioner's claims, and its 
    reporting was reasonable. Where possible, i.e., for EP sales, SeAH has 
    reported shipment-by-shipment freight costs. Because SeAH is unable to 
    link shipments to the warehouse and sales from the warehouse for CEP 
    sales, we consider the average per-metric ton costs to be the most 
    reasonable methodology available for reporting CEP sales.
        We have also found that while SeAH recorded these plant-to-
    warehouse expenses as selling expenses in its books, this does not mean 
    that they must be reported for the Department's purposes as selling 
    expenses. SeAH's plant-to-warehouse freight costs should not be added 
    to SeAH's reported G&A expense because plant-to-warehouse freight costs 
    are considered movement expense for antidumping calculation purposes.
    Comment 33: Foreign Brokerage Charges
        The petitioners find that SeAH's foreign brokerage charges have 
    been calculated incorrectly because they are
    
    [[Page 32846]]
    
    based on the FOB value of each shipment divided by the number of tons 
    in each shipment. The petitioners find that this calculation results in 
    distortions because it does not account for variance in value. The 
    petitioners suggest that the Department recalculate foreign brokerage 
    charges by multiplying, for each observation, the per-unit value by the 
    ad valorem charges for foreign brokerage. For brokerage on CEP sales, 
    the petitioners suggest the use of on facts available because SeAH has 
    not acted to the best of its ability in reporting expenses on a 
    transaction-specific basis.
        SeAH states that its foreign brokerage methodology based on volume 
    has not been questioned by the Department. SeAH conducted a sample 
    value allocation of 50 observations (27 sales) and found it made little 
    difference to the calculation. SeAH argues that its methodology is 
    sound and that there is no reason for a change in methodology for the 
    final results. If, in fact, the Department finds reason for a change in 
    methodology, SeAH provides several suggestions for the revised 
    calculation.
    Department's Position
        We agree with the petitioners. We have reviewed SeAH's responses 
    and found that foreign brokerage should be reallocated based on value 
    because it is incurred based on value. We have made this reallocation 
    in our final results.
    Comment 34: SG&A Expenses
        The petitioners state that SeAH has erred in reducing the SG&A 
    component of CV by the amount of expenses in its books for factory-to-
    warehouse freight. In addition, the petitioners claim that SeAH is not 
    clear in explaining whether the credit expenses, container stuffing 
    charges and postage expenses recorded in its books that were not 
    included in SG&A have been included elsewhere.
        SeAH states that credit expenses, container stuffing charges and 
    postage, as documented in its response, were incurred on exports of 
    non-subject merchandise. As for the factory-to-warehouse freight, SeAH 
    explained that this was reported as a movement expense in the response 
    to the questionnaire.
    Department's Position
        SeAH used the accounts for SG&A from its books and then deducted 
    various costs from those accounts when appropriate (i.e., costs not 
    associated with subject merchandise and freight costs which were 
    reported separately). Therefore, we have not changed SeAH's SG&A 
    component of CV.
    Comment 35: Selling Expenses of Affiliated Importers
        The petitioners point out that regardless of how selling expenses 
    of SeAH's affiliated importers are characterized, they should be 
    deducted from CEP. Each of these companies incurs SG&A expenses in 
    performing selling functions that have been relocated from Korea, 
    including shipping arrangements, arranging for entry of the 
    merchandise, issuing invoices, inventory maintenance, and collecting 
    payment. Whether they are considered direct or indirect selling 
    expenses, the petitioners find that they should be deducted from the 
    price used to establish CEP.
        SeAH does not disagree that indirect selling expenses should be 
    deducted from CEP sales. SeAH stated that indirect selling expenses 
    were deducted from CEP sales in the Preliminary Results margin 
    calculation program. SeAH believes that there is no reason to change 
    this portion of the programming for the final results.
    Department's Position
        We deducted indirect and direct selling expenses from CEP sales for 
    the Preliminary Results of this review and have continued to do so for 
    these final results.
    Comment 36: Marine Insurance Costs
        The petitioners suggest that based on information provided in 
    SeAH's response, SeAH is able to calculate its marine insurance costs 
    on a product-specific basis. The petitioners also find that SeAH's 
    method of calculating marine insurance is distortive because it is an 
    average over all products and not based on a per-transaction basis. 
    Because SeAH is able to determine the marine insurance premium rate 
    applicable to all reported shipments of subject merchandise, and can 
    trace the C&F value of each product for each shipment, the petitioners 
    claim that it should have calculated an average per-metric ton 
    insurance expense on a transaction-specific basis. The petitioners 
    state that SeAH has further proven itself uncooperative by not at least 
    reporting average marine insurance on a product-specific basis. The 
    petitioners suggest that SeAH's marine insurance costs be based on 
    facts available.
        SeAH argues that the Department should reaffirm the methodology 
    used in the first reviews of this case. SeAH maintains that it has 
    explained adequately why it cannot calculate marine insurance on a 
    transaction-specific basis in its response.
    Department's Position
        We agree with SeAH that it has used a reasonable and appropriate 
    methodology to report their marine insurance costs. SeAH has calculated 
    the reported amount of marine insurance on the same basis that it is 
    incurred by applying the insurance premium rate to the C&F value of the 
    shipment as shown on the commercial invoice. We are accepting SeAH's 
    methodology for these final results.
    Comment 37: Transaction-specific Entered Values for CEP Sales
        The petitioners suggest that SeAH is able to calculate the average 
    entered value during the POR for sales on a product-specific basis. The 
    petitioners maintain that SeAH's reporting of an average per-unit 
    entered value by surface finish rather than a transaction-specific 
    entered value proves that SeAH has not responded to the best of its 
    ability. The petitioners suggest entered values for CEP based on facts 
    available.
        SeAH argues that its methodology is consistent with that used in 
    the First Review, but has provided information if the Department 
    chooses to calculate an approximate entered value.
    Department's Position
        Since we are calculating assessment rates on a per-volume, as 
    opposed to value, basis, this issue is moot.
    
    Shinho
    
    Comment 38: Basis of Indirect Selling Expense Allocations
        The petitioners argue that Shinho failed to justify its allocation 
    of indirect selling expenses by the number of employees in its various 
    divisions. The petitioners note that the Department stated in a 
    supplemental questionnaire that its preferred methodology is to 
    allocate such expenses on the basis of sales volume. Furthermore, the 
    petitioners cite the Notice of Final Determination of Sales Less Than 
    Fair Value: Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate From South Africa, 
    (Carbon Steel Plate) 62 FR 61731, 61736 (November 19, 1997), as stating 
    that the Department normally allocates G&A expenses based on the cost 
    of sales because an allocation ``based on a single factor (e.g., head 
    counts, fixed costs) is purely speculative.'' The petitioners also 
    point to Carbon Steel Plate which it states that to deviate from this 
    methodology requires ``evidence that our normal G&A allocation 
    methodology unreasonably states G&A costs.'' Therefore, the petitioners 
    conclude that the Department should allocate
    
    [[Page 32847]]
    
    Shinho's indirect expenses based on the cost of sales.
        Shinho states that its accounting records do not separately record 
    (SG&A) expenses. Thus, in order to assign costs to each of these 
    functions, Shinho allocated those expenses not directly assignable to 
    each division on the basis of a headcount. Shinho claims that its 
    allocation methodology for indirect selling expenses is consistent with 
    its practice in the original investigation, which was verified and 
    accepted by the Department. Furthermore, Shinho asserts that while the 
    Department prefers to allocate such expenses based on sales volume, it 
    will accept alternatives that are reasonable and fully explained. 
    Shinho states that it adequately explained its methodology and that it 
    is reasonable because many such expenses are related to the number of 
    employees in each division.
    Department's Position
        Contrary to the petitioner's assertions, we note that Shinho did 
    allocate some indirect selling expense items by value. As for the items 
    that Shinho allocated by number of employees, we find its methodology 
    to be reasonable because these items vary according to the number of 
    employees. This methodology is consistent with that used in the 
    original investigation (see, LTFV at 57).
    Comment 39: Allocation of Packing Expenses
        The petitioners maintain that Shinho misallocated the cost of 
    packing clips and bands by allocating their cost by metric ton rather 
    than by bundle. The petitioners argue that Shinho has not shown that 
    its per-bundle usage rate approximates its calculated weight basis. 
    Additionally, the petitioners state that Shinho has not been 
    cooperative in reporting its packing costs by (1) failing to report the 
    average cost of each packing material as requested by the Department, 
    (2) not reporting a cost for the white steel bands noted in their 
    response, (3) providing packing cost worksheets that are inconsistent 
    and irreconcilable, (4) not identifying the composition of ``common'' 
    packing material costs, (5) not fully explaining the derivation of the 
    allocated coating materials costs, and (6) using an improper 
    methodology for calculating packing labor costs. Thus, the petitioners 
    argue that the Department should double Shinho's reported home market 
    packing costs for use as facts available for its U.S. packing costs. In 
    support of this recommendation, the petitioners cite Circular Welded 
    Non-Alloy Steel Pipes and Tubes from Mexico: Final Results of 
    Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 62 FR 37014, 37020 (July 10, 
    1997), where the Department followed such a methodology when the 
    respondent had been uncooperative.
        With regard to the manner in which it allocated its packing bands 
    and clips, Shinho asserts that the distinction drawn by the petitioners 
    between a per-bundle and a per-metric ton allocation is a ``distinction 
    without a difference.'' Next, Shinho states that ``white'' steel bands 
    do not refer to a separate packing material but rather to the bands 
    used to bind galvanized pipe (internally referred to as ``white'' pipe) 
    and are included already in the reported costs. Additionally, Shinho 
    disputes the petitioners' claim that the worksheets it provided with 
    its response are inconsistent. According to Shinho, its worksheets 
    contain the information necessary to calculate the average cost of each 
    packing material, including coating materials, on a product-specific 
    basis and that these product-specific costs reconcile with the total 
    material usage. Moreover, Shinho states that its allocation of packing 
    labor expenses is consistent with its normal accounting methodology. 
    Shinho further asserts that a per-metric ton allocation of packing 
    labor expense is appropriate because Shinho's operation of a crane 
    accounts for a substantial amount of the packing labor expense. 
    According to Shinho, the capacity of the crane used for packing is 
    measured in tons, the same basis used to allocate the expense. For the 
    aforementioned reasons, Shinho argues that the Department should reject 
    the petitioners' call for the use of adverse facts available for 
    Shinho's home market packing costs.
    Department's Position
        For purposes of this review, we find Shinho's allocation of the 
    cost of bands and clips to be reasonable. With regard to the 
    petitioners' other points, we find that the information submitted by 
    Shinho with regard to packing costs supports the reported amounts. 
    Therefore, we find no reason to apply facts available with regard to 
    Shinho's packing costs.
    Comment 40: Home Market Credit Period
        The petitioners assert that it is unclear whether Shinho calculated 
    its customer-specific average credit period on a monthly or annual 
    basis because Shinho stated that it maintains its accounts receivables 
    on a monthly basis and its notes receivables on an annual basis. 
    Additionally, the petitioners cite the example Shinho prepared 
    comparing a specific customer's monthly average accounts receivable 
    period to the year-end accounts receivable for the same customer. The 
    petitioners state that this example, based on a customer that Shinho 
    hand-picked, shows that Shinho overstated its home market credit 
    period. Given these apparent discrepancies, the petitioners request 
    that the Department not adjust NV for home market credit expenses.
        Shinho states that, in this review, it reported its home market 
    credit period on an annual, customer-specific basis. According to 
    Shinho, this method most closely approximates the invoice-specific 
    credit period, which is the Department's preferred methodology. Shinho 
    states the Department has accepted customer-specific reporting in other 
    cases. See Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews and 
    Revocation in Part of an Antidumping Duty Order: Antifriction Bearings 
    and Parts thereof from France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Romania, 
    Singapore, Sweden, Thailand, and the United Kingdom, 58 FR 39729, 39747 
    (July 29, 1993) and Industrial Belts and Components and Parts Thereof, 
    Whether Cured or Uncured from Japan: Final Results of Antidumping 
    Administrative Review, 58 FR 30018, 30023 (May 25, 1993).
    Department's Position
        We find that Shinho's use of average annual customer-specific home 
    market credit periods is reasonable giving the limitations of its 
    accounting system. Therefore, we are using Shinho's reported customer-
    specific home market credit periods for these final results with the 
    exception of one customer. We agree with the petitioners that the 
    supporting documentation Shinho provided comparing the customer-
    specific monthly average to the year-end average credit period for this 
    one customer showed that the reported credit period is overstated. 
    Therefore, we have adjusted the home market credit period for this 
    customer.
    Comment 41: Reliability of Home Market Short-term Interest Rate
        The petitioners argue that the Department should not make an 
    adjustment for home market credit expenses because Shinho's reported 
    home market interest rate is unreliable. The petitioners assert that 
    Shinho's trial balance, used by Shinho to support its claim for its 
    reported US interest rate, refutes Shinho's home market credit 
    calculation. The petitioners state that if the Department does not 
    reject Shinho's home market credit expense adjustment in its entirety, 
    as facts available, it
    
    [[Page 32848]]
    
    should instead calculate the expense using the US interest rate.
        Shinho states that the Department should not reject the firm's 
    calculation of its home market short-term interest rate based on a 
    document provided to support its calculation of its corresponding US 
    interest rate. Shinho argues that the Department did not request that 
    the company reconcile its home market credit expense calculation to 
    supporting company accounting records, including its trial balance. 
    Shinho contends, however, that had the Department made such a request, 
    the company could easily have shown how it had derived the figures used 
    in its home market credit calculation. Furthermore, Shinho states that 
    the same methodology was accepted and verified by the Department in the 
    prior review.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Shinho that we should not reject or adjust its 
    reported home market interest rate. We requested a reconciliation of 
    Shinho's reported US interest rate; however, we did not request such a 
    reconciliation for its home market interest rate. Thus, we have no 
    reason to believe that the reported home market interest rate is 
    inaccurate.
    Comment 42: Interest Expense Factor
        The petitioners state that it is the Department's policy to require 
    that interest income used to offset interest expense for the purpose of 
    calculating CV be related directly to production and short-term in 
    nature. See, First Review Final Results at 55583 and Flowers from 
    Colombia, at 42833, 42843.
        According to the petitioners, Shinho estimated its short-term 
    interest income by calculating its ratio of short-term to long-term 
    deposits. Shinho applied this ratio to the total interest earned to 
    calculate the amount of short-term interest it earned. The petitioners 
    assert that this ratio overstates the short-term interest earned 
    because short-term deposits typically earn less interest than similar 
    long-term deposits. Furthermore, the petitioners claim, Shinho did not 
    identify the short-term deposits that earned interest income or show 
    that its accounting records do not track separately short-term interest 
    income. Finally, the petitioners argue that Shinho did not show that 
    the interest earned from securities was related to production. For each 
    of these reasons, the petitioners state that the Department should 
    reject Shinho's claimed interest income as an offset to its interest 
    expense.
        Shinho argues that the Department should continue to offset the 
    firm's interest expense with the short-term interest income that it 
    reported. Shinho asserts that its methodology of calculating short-term 
    interest income is reasonable given that short-term interest income 
    earned is not recorded separately from long-term interest income in its 
    financial statements. Shinho states that the Department accepted a 
    similar approach in the Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair 
    Value: Certain Stainless Steel Wire Rods from France, 58 FR 68865, 
    68872 (December 29, 1993). Shinho maintains that the petitioners' 
    citation of the previous review is erroneous because, in that review, 
    the Department rejected the inclusion of a particular investment 
    because it was not short-term, rather than rejecting the full offset 
    because it was calculated by applying a ratio of short-term to total 
    deposits. Finally, Shinho states that the Department did not question 
    the company's methodology and that the petitioner, prior to its briefs, 
    did not raise the issue.
    Department's Position
        We agree with the petitioners' assertion that Shinho's methodology 
    for calculating the interest income offset to interest expense would be 
    distortional when short-term and long-term deposits earn interest at 
    different rates. Given that the records of interest income earned by 
    Shinho maintained in the normal course of business do not track 
    interest income vis-a-vis the term of the deposit, we have adjusted 
    Shinho's reported interest income offset based on the difference 
    between the short-term deposit rate and the long-term government bond 
    rate in Korea. Additionally, with respect to petitioners' argument that 
    we reject the nature of Shinho's interest income from securities, there 
    is no information on the record which indicates that this income earned 
    from securities was other than short-term in nature. Therefore, we have 
    retained this income in our calculation of Shinho's interest expense 
    for COP and CV.
    Comment 43: Exchange Rate Gains & Losses
        The petitioners assert that Shinho failed to account for its 
    foreign exchange gains and losses in its cost calculations. The 
    petitioners state that it is the Department's standard practice to 
    account for these gains and losses when they are related to production. 
    Therefore, the petitioners state that the Department should make the 
    appropriate adjustment to Shinho's net interest expense factor.
        Shinho agrees that it did not adjust its interest factor for 
    foreign exchange gains and losses. However, Shinho states that it did 
    provide the Department with the information necessary to make the 
    adjustment. Shinho notes that the requested adjustment is relatively 
    insignificant.
    Department's Position
        It is the Department's standard policy to adjust for foreign 
    exchange gains and losses in a respondent's net interest expense 
    factor. We have made this adjustment for these final results.
    Comment 44: Control Number Uniqueness
        The petitioners state that the Department should consolidate 
    several of Shinho's control numbers that have identical matching 
    criteria.
        Shinho agrees that two of the control numbers at issue are 
    identical under the Department's concordance hierarchy, but that this 
    discrepancy did not have an impact on the margin calculations in the 
    Prelimary Results. Shinho disagrees with the petitioner that a third 
    product is identical under the Department's hierarchy because one of 
    the matching characteristics is different.
    Department's Position
        We have combined the two products that have identical matching 
    criteria. We agree that the third product differs in one of the 
    matching criteria; therefore, we have not reclassified this product.
    
    Currency Conversion
    
        We made currency conversions in accordance with section 773A of the 
    Act based on the rates certified by the Federal Reserve Bank. Section 
    773A(a) directs the Department to use a daily exchange rate to convert 
    foreign currencies into U.S. dollars unless the daily rate involves a 
    ``fluctuation.'' It is our practice to find that a fluctuation exists 
    when the daily exchange rate differs from a benchmark rate by 2.25 
    percent. See Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review: Certain Welded Carbon Steel Pipe and Tube from Turkey, 61 FR 
    35188, 35192 (July 5, 1996). The benchmark rate is defined as the 
    rolling average of the rates for the past 40 business days.
    
    Final Results of the Review
    
        As a result of this review, we find that the following margin 
    exists for the period November 1, 1995, through October 31, 1996:
    
    [[Page 32849]]
    
    
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Margin  
                        Manufacturer/exporter                      (percent)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Hyundai.....................................................        4.01
    KISCO/Union.................................................        0.71
    Shinho......................................................        3.34
    SeAH........................................................        3.51
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Parties to the proceeding may request disclosure within five days 
    of the date of publication of this notice. In accordance with the 
    methodology in First Review Final Results we calculated exporter/
    importer-specific assessment values by dividing the total dumping 
    duties due for each importer by the number of tons used to determine 
    the duties due. We will direct Customs to assess the resulting per-ton 
    dollar amount against each ton of the merchandise entered by these 
    importers' during the review period.
        Furthermore, the following deposit requirements will be effective 
    for all shipments of welded non-alloy steel pipe from Korea entered, or 
    withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption on or after the publication 
    date of these final results of administrative review, as provided by 
    section 751(a)(1) of the Act: (1) The cash deposit rate for the 
    reviewed companies will be the rates established in the final results 
    of this administrative review (except no cash deposit will be required 
    for those companies whose weighted-average margin is de minimis, i.e., 
    less than 0.5 percent); (2) for merchandise exported by manufacturers 
    or exporters not covered in this review but covered in the original 
    less-than-fair-value investigation or a previous review, the cash 
    deposit will continue to be the most recent rate published in the final 
    determination or final results for which the manufacturer or exporter 
    received an individual rate; (3) if the exporter is not a firm covered 
    in this review, the previous review, or the original investigation, but 
    the manufacturer is, the cash deposit rate will be the rate established 
    for the most recent period for the manufacturer of the merchandise; and 
    (4) if neither the exporter nor the manufacturer is a firm covered in 
    this or any previous reviews, the cash deposit rate will be 4.80 
    percent, the ``all others'' rate established in the less-than-fair-
    value investigation. See LTFV at 42942.
        This notice serves as a preliminary reminder to importers of their 
    responsibility to file a certificate regarding the reimbursement of 
    antidumping duties prior to liquidation of the relevant entries during 
    this review period. Failure to comply with this requirement could 
    result in the Secretary's presumption that reimbursement of antidumping 
    duties occurred and the subsequent assessment of double antidumping 
    duties.
        This administrative review and notice are in accordance with 
    sections 751(a)(1) and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
    
        Dated: June 8, 1998.
    Robert S. LaRussa,
    Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 98-15874 Filed 6-15-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/16/1998
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review.
Document Number:
98-15874
Dates:
June 16, 1998.
Pages:
32833-32849 (17 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-580-809
PDF File:
98-15874.pdf