99-20449. Certain Hot-Rolled Lead and Bismuth Carbon Steel Products From Germany: Final Results of Antidumping Administrative Review  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 152 (Monday, August 9, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 43146-43149]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-20449]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    [A-428-811]
    
    
    Certain Hot-Rolled Lead and Bismuth Carbon Steel Products From 
    Germany: Final Results of Antidumping Administrative Review
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of final results of antidumping duty administrative 
    review.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: On April 6, 1999, the Department of Commerce published the 
    preliminary results of the administrative review of the antidumping 
    duty order on certain lead and bismuth carbon steel products from 
    Germany (64 FR 16703). This review covers Saarstahl AG, a manufacturer/
    exporter of the subject merchandise to the United States, and the 
    period March 1, 1997, through February 28, 1998. We conducted a 
    verification of Saarstahl's antidumping duty questionnaire responses 
    and gave interested parties an opportunity to comment on the 
    preliminary results. Based on our analysis of the comments received and 
    the correction of certain data, we have revised our margin calculation; 
    however, the final results do not differ from the preliminary results. 
    The final results are listed below in the ``Final Results of Review'' 
    section of this notice.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: August 9, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David J. Goldberger or Rebecca 
    Trainor, Office 2, AD/CVD Enforcement Group I, Import Administration, 
    Room B099, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of 
    Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington DC 
    20230; telephone (202) 482-4136, or 482-4007, respectively.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        On April 6, 1999, the Department of Commerce (the Department) 
    published in the Federal Register the preliminary results of the 1997-
    1998 administrative review of the antidumping duty order on certain 
    lead and bismuth carbon steel products from Germany (64 FR 16703) 
    (Preliminary Results). We conducted verification of Saarstahl AG's 
    (Saarstahl) antidumping duty questionnaire responses from April 27 
    through May 7, 1999, and issued our report on June 1, 1999 (see 
    Memorandum to the File: Sales and Cost of Production Verification) 
    (Verification Report). On June 17, 1999, and June 23, 1999, Ispat 
    Inland Inc. and USS/KOBE Steel Co. (the petitioners), and Saarstahl 
    submitted case and rebuttal briefs, respectively. Following the return 
    to the petitioners of their June 10, 1999, submission, which contained 
    untimely submitted factual information, on June 29, 1999, the 
    petitioners resubmitted their June 17, 1999, brief with references to 
    the June 10 submission redacted, in accordance with the Department's 
    instructions. Both parties withdrew their respective requests for a 
    hearing.
        The Department has now completed its administrative review in 
    accordance with section 751 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (the 
    Act).
    
    Applicable Statute and Regulations
    
        Unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the Act are references 
    to the provisions effective January 1, 1995, the effective date of the 
    amendments made to the Act by the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA). 
    In addition, unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the 
    Department's regulations are to the regulations at 19 CFR part 351 
    (1998).
    
    Scope of the Review
    
        The products covered by this review are hot-rolled bars and rods of 
    nonalloy or other alloy steel, whether or not descaled, containing by 
    weight 0.03 percent or more of lead or 0.05 percent or more of bismuth, 
    in coils or cut lengths, and in numerous shapes and sizes. Excluded 
    from the scope of this review are other alloy steels (as defined by the 
    Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) Chapter 72, 
    note 1(f)), except steels classified as other alloy steels by reason of 
    containing by weight 0.4 percent or more of lead, or 0.1 percent or 
    more of bismuth, tellurium, or selenium. Also excluded are semi-
    finished steels and flat-rolled products. Most of the products covered 
    in this review are provided for under subheadings 7213.20.00.00 and 
    7214.30.00.00 of the HTSUS. Small quantities of these products may also 
    enter the United States under the following HTSUS subheadings: 
    7213.31.30.00; 7213.31.60.00; 7213.39.00.30; 7213.39.00.60; 
    7213.39.00.90; 7213.91.30.00; 7213.91.45.00; 7213.91.60.00; 7213.99.00; 
    7214.40.00.10, 7214.40.00.30, 7214.40.00.50; 7214.50.00.10; 
    7214.50.00.30, 7214.50.00.50; 7214.60.00.10; 7214.60.00.30; 
    7214.60.00.50; 7214.91.00; 7214.99.00; 7228.30.80.00; and 
    7228.30.80.50. HTSUS subheadings are provided for convenience and 
    Customs purposes. The written description of the scope of this 
    proceeding is dispositive.
    
    Duty Absorption
    
        On April 28, 1998, the petitioners requested that the Department 
    determine whether antidumping duties had been absorbed during the 
    period of review (POR). Section 751(a)(4) of the Act provides for the 
    Department, if requested, to determine during an administrative review 
    initiated two or four years after the publication of the order, whether 
    antidumping duties have been absorbed by a foreign producer or 
    exporter, if the subject merchandise is sold in the United States 
    through an affiliated importer. In this case, Saarstahl sold to the 
    United States through an importer that is affiliated within the meaning 
    of section 751(a)(4) of the Act.
        Section 351.213(j)(2) of the Department's regulations provides that 
    for transition orders (i.e., orders in effect on January 1, 1995), the 
    Department will conduct duty absorption reviews, if requested, for 
    administrative reviews initiated in 1996 or 1998. Because the order 
    underlying this review was issued prior to January 1, 1995, and this 
    review was initiated in 1998, a duty absorption determination in this 
    segment of the proceeding is necessary. As we have found that there is 
    no dumping margin for Saarstahl with respect to its U.S. sales, we have 
    also found that there is no duty absorption.
    
    Changes Since the Preliminary Results
    
        We have made the following changes from the preliminary results:
        1. We included payment dates for certain home market sales that 
    were not included in the preliminary results, according to Saarstahl's 
    April 28, 1999, submission and the verification results. Accordingly, 
    we revised the imputed credit expenses for those sales.
        2. We reallocated the materials, labor, and overhead costs reported 
    by Saarstahl, in accordance with our verification findings (see 
    Verification Report at pages 5-6). The reallocation did not change the 
    total cost of manufacturing reported. We used the computer programming 
    language
    
    [[Page 43147]]
    
    supplied by Saarstahl in its case brief to accomplish the reallocation.
        3. We revised the reported depreciation, general and administrative 
    (G&A), and financial expense ratios to reflect corporate-wide costs, 
    rather than rolled products division expenses, based on our 
    verification findings.
        4. We corrected the reported billing adjustments for two home 
    market sales, based on verification findings.
        5. We added an early payment discount for one home market sale, 
    based on verification findings.
        6. We revised the payment dates for certain home market and U.S. 
    sales to reflect the actual date Saarstahl received payment, based on 
    verification findings. Accordingly, we revised the imputed credit 
    expenses for those sales. (A separate issue concerning payment dates is 
    discussed below at Comment 5.)
        7. We revised the reported home market and U.S. indirect selling 
    expenses to exclude bank fees reported separately.
        8. We revised the arm's length test to affiliated customers to 
    account for level of trade in making affiliated to unaffiliated price 
    comparisons, in accordance with the Department's practice (see, e.g., 
    Final Results and Partial Rescission of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review: Certain Pasta From Turkey, 63 FR 68429, 68432, December 11, 
    1998). We also corrected an error in the programming language which 
    prevented the program from performing a complete comparison of 
    affiliated to unaffiliated customer prices. We did not make the 
    programming change suggested in Saarstahl's case brief at page 6, as we 
    determined that Saarstahl's proposal did not correct the error.
        9. We revised the reported production quantity for one product, 
    based on our verification findings, for purposes of weight-averaging 
    the costs of production. See Comment 4 below for further discussion.
    
    Interested Party Comments
    
    Comment 1: Casting Type as a Product Matching Criterion
    
        The petitioners contend that casting type--i.e., whether a product 
    is produced from bloom-cast billets or continuous cast billets--should 
    be included in the Department's model matching hierarchy as the second 
    most important criterion. The petitioners argue that the type of 
    casting has a much greater impact on cost and commercial value than any 
    of the remaining product characteristics, as indicated, according to 
    the petitioners, by Saarstahl's own cost information.
        Saarstahl responds that the petitioners failed to introduce any 
    timely information concerning quantifiable physical differences between 
    bloom-cast and billet-cast products. Therefore, Saarstahl states that 
    the Department must maintain the determination made in the preliminary 
    results and decline to add casting type as a product matching 
    characteristic.
        DOC Position: We disagree with the petitioners and we continue to 
    make product comparisons based on chemical composition, shape, cut 
    (i.e., coil or cut-to-length), size, and grade, as in our preliminary 
    results and in the underlying less-than-fair value (LTFV) 
    investigation.
        As discussed in the preliminary results Model Match Methodology 
    Memorandum from the Team to Irene Darzenta Tzafolias, dated March 22, 
    1999 (Model Match Methodology Memorandum), for purposes of selecting 
    model match criteria, the Department normally relies on physical 
    characteristics of the merchandise that are identifiable and/or 
    quantifable (see, e.g., Notice of Preliminary Determination of Sales at 
    Less Than Fair Value and Postponement of Final Determination: Melamine 
    Institutional Dinnerware Products From Indonesia, 61 FR 43333, 43334, 
    August 22, 1996, and Notice of Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty 
    Administrative Review: Porcelain-on-Steel Cookware From Mexico, 63 FR 
    1430, 1431, January 9, 1998). Casting type is a production method, not 
    a physical characteristic of the merchandise. As such, it is not an 
    appropriate criterion for inclusion in our model match methodology.
        Throughout this segment of the proceeding, the petitioners have 
    argued that bloom casting makes the finished merchandise ``better.'' 
    The physical characteristic that makes the product better, say 
    petitioners in their July 2, 1998, and August 6, 1998, letters, is the 
    more uniform distribution of lead and bismuth within the steel, and 
    enhanced manganese sulfide formation. In effect, the petitioners 
    contend that these factors, as apparently determined by the casting 
    method, are so important that they outweigh the shape, cut form, size, 
    and grade of the merchandise in determining the most similar match. We 
    find no basis on the record to support this contention.
        No party has provided any information, nor did we find any evidence 
    at verification, to indicate that customers order products specifying, 
    among other things, lead and bismuth distribution and manganese sulfide 
    formation. No party has provided any timely information, nor did we 
    find any evidence at verification, that lead and bismuth distribution 
    and manganese sulfide formation are measured, quantified, and tracked 
    through the production process. Instead, the evidence on the record, as 
    we verified, shows that customers order the subject merchandise by 
    chemical composition (including grade), shape, cut form, and size. We 
    found no evidence that either casting type, lead and bismuth 
    distribution, or sulfide qualities were specified as part of a customer 
    order. The only link between a customer order specification and the 
    production process that we observed at verification was that, where 
    ultrasound testing of the billet was requested, Saarstahl had to 
    utilize a bloom cast billet (see Verification Report at pages 9-10). 
    There is no information on the record of this proceeding, however, that 
    a customer specification for ultrasound testing is equivalent to a 
    specification for bloom casting.
        We recognize that bloom casting results in a higher cost for 
    producing the subject merchandise. However, a cost difference alone is 
    not a sufficient basis to establish a model matching characteristic. As 
    we noted in the last segment of the administrative review of the 
    companion antidumping duty order on the subject merchandise from the 
    United Kingdom, ``the creation of a product concordance inherently 
    relies upon the matching of significant physical characteristics, not 
    on cost groupings in a company's cost accounting system.'' (See, Notice 
    of Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review: Certain 
    Hot-Rolled Lead and Bismuth Carbon Steel Products from the United 
    Kingdom, 63 FR 18879, 18881, April 16, 1998.) Consistent with our usual 
    practice to compute weighted-average costs for identical (in terms of 
    the Department's matching characteristics) merchandise produced at 
    multiple production lines or facilities with different costs (see, 
    e.g., the Department's standard antidumping duty administrative review 
    questionnaire at page D-2), we have followed our preliminary results 
    methodology and calculated a weighted-average cost of bloom-cast and 
    billet-cast models with the same physical characteristics.
    
    Comment 2: Casting Type of Saarstahl's U.S. Sales
    
        The petitioners contend that Department practice considers the data 
    on mill test certificates to be definitive evidence of the physical 
    characteristics of the merchandise sold. Therefore, based on the 
    statement in the mill certificate that Saarstahl's U.S. sales
    
    [[Page 43148]]
    
    were produced from billets made from continuous cast blooms, the 
    petitioners argue that, in fact, the U.S. sales were produced from 
    continuous cast blooms. As such, the petitioners assert that the 
    Department should apply facts available in calculating the margins for 
    these sales due to the misreporting of the product and its attendant 
    costs. In the alternative, should the Department conclude that the 
    sales in question were actually produced from continuous cast billets, 
    rather than blooms, the petitioners contend that the Department should 
    disregard the U.S. sales in this review. According to the petitioners, 
    because the mill certificates indicate that the merchandise was made 
    from blooms, Saarstahl misled its customer as to the production of the 
    merchandise and provided it with an inferior product than that 
    indicated on each mill certificate. Thus, the petitioners continue, the 
    U.S. sales cannot form an appropriate basis for the calculation of a 
    dumping margin.
        Saarstahl notes that its submissions in the course of this 
    proceeding and the Department's examination of this issue at 
    verification, including examination of production certificates, casting 
    records and production instructions, all conclusively confirm that 
    Saarstahl's U.S. sales were produced from continuous cast billets and 
    not bloom-cast billets. Saarstahl adds that the petitioners fail to 
    mention that directly below the statement in question on the mill test 
    certificates is a reduction ratio that shows that the merchandise could 
    not possibly have been made from blooms. Saarstahl continues that there 
    is no basis on the record to support the petitioners' bald assertion 
    that Saarstahl misled its customers about the nature of the 
    merchandise. Saarstahl states that it produced the merchandise using 
    its normal production process for leaded steels (i.e., billet-casting), 
    and that there is no evidence that Saarstahl's production from 
    continuous cast billets is in any way deficient or inferior.
        DOC Position: We agree with Saarstahl. As Saarstahl notes, the 
    Department thoroughly examined this issue at verification. While the 
    mill certificates for the sales in question contain language that 
    suggests the sales were produced from blooms, as cited by the 
    petitioners, the same mill certificates also include the reduction 
    ratio, which, as Saarstahl states, provides a quantifiable measure of 
    the rolling process. As Saarstahl claimed and we verified, the 
    reduction ratio on the mill certificate indicates a billet-cast 
    product. All of the other evidence examined at verification, including 
    customer purchase orders, invoices, heat certificates, heat production 
    logs, and production ``recipes,'' showed that the sales were produced 
    from continuous cast billets (see Verification Report at pages 9-11). 
    In light of the substantial evidence in support of Saarstahl's 
    characterization of the U.S. sales as produced from continuous cast 
    billets, as opposed to the petitioners' reliance on a single line in 
    the mill certificate referencing continuous cast blooms, we conclude 
    that the U.S. sales were produced from continuous cast billets. Thus, 
    application of facts available in lieu of the use of the reported and 
    verified data, as urged by the petitioners, is not warranted in this 
    case.
        We also find no factual basis on the record for the petitioner's 
    contention that, if the sales were not produced from blooms, Saarstahl 
    misled its customer. The customer's purchase order did not specify 
    production method. Further, none of the sales documentation reported 
    and reviewed at verification misrepresented the production of 
    Saarstahl's sales to its customer. As discussed previously, the bloom-
    cast notation on the mill certificate is followed by the reduction 
    ratio, which shows that cast billets were used in the production 
    process. Thus, it appears that the customer received sufficient 
    information to determine if its specifications were met. We also found 
    no indication that Saarstahl's customer rejected the merchandise or 
    otherwise complained about the product for alleged misrepresentation. 
    In sum, there is no basis on the record to reject Saarstahl's reported 
    POR sales.
        Comment 3: Adjusting Saarstahl's Costs for Over-reporting
        Saarstahl states that, at verification, it demonstrated that it 
    over-reported certain costs of production because it reported costs 
    based on exchange rate loss estimates and imputed personnel expenses 
    for fringe benefits, as recorded in its cost accounting system. 
    According to Saarstahl, its actual expenses for these items were lower 
    than reported, as it experienced an exchange rate gain during the POR, 
    and its actual personnel expenses were lower than the imputed amount. 
    Therefore, Saarstahl contends that the Department should adjust its 
    costs downward to reflect these actual costs.
        The petitioners respond that these adjustments should not be made 
    because they represent new information provided by Saarstahl for the 
    first time at verification. The petitioners state that these 
    adjustments are inconsistent with Saarstahl's own cost accounting 
    system and should be rejected.
        DOC Position: We agree with the petitioners that the information is 
    untimely. While we successfully verified Saarstahl's costs, as reported 
    to the Department in a timely manner, the claimed adjustments between 
    the cost and financial accounting systems were never reported to the 
    Department prior to verification. Thus, these adjustments were not part 
    of the cost of production questionnaire response that was the subject 
    of verification.
    
    Comment 4: Correction of Production Quantities for Weight-Averaging of 
    Costs
    
        The petitioners state that, if the Department declines to include 
    casting method as a product characteristic, as discussed above, then it 
    should correct the reported production quantities used for the weight-
    averaging of costs. The petitioners refer to the Department's finding 
    at verification that Saarstahl did not subtract the production 
    quantities of bloom-cast and secondary merchandise from the billet-cast 
    total, resulting in the double-counting of some products and the 
    understatement of costs in the weighted-average total. Accordingly, the 
    petitioners contend that the Department should adjust the production 
    quantities in calculating the weighted-average costs.
        Saarstahl states that it properly reported its cost of production 
    based upon the explicit directions given by the Department. Saarstahl 
    claims that the Department's observation that, for sales sampled at 
    verification, Saarstahl over-reported the production quantity for 
    billet-cast products is not universally true for all of Saarstahl's 
    reported products. Should the Department combine and weight-average its 
    reported costs, as it did for the preliminary results, Saarstahl 
    contends that the Department should do so in a way that does not 
    negatively impact Saarstahl.
        DOC Position: Although we stated in the Verification Report at 
    pages 18-19 that the double-counting of production quantities for a 
    billet-cast product observed at verification appeared to apply to all 
    of Saarstahl's billet-cast products, further analysis of the cost of 
    production data indicates that this situation is not necessarily the 
    case. For example, the cost of production data base includes products 
    where the reported production quantity for a bloom-cast product is 
    greater than the production quantity reported for a billet-cast product 
    with identical physical characteristics. Therefore, we have revised the 
    reported production quantity only for the product identified in the 
    Verification Report for which we
    
    [[Page 43149]]
    
    verified that the production quantity was double counted.
    
    Comment 5: Bill of Exchange Payment Date
    
        Saarstahl asserts that it properly reported the date it received a 
    bill of exchange from a home market customer as the payment date for 
    purposes of calculating imputed credit. Saarstahl states that a bill of 
    exchange is a negotiable monetary instrument that has a cash value on 
    the date of its receipt, thus Saarstahl's reporting of the bill receipt 
    in the same manner as a cash payment was proper.
        DOC Position: We have made no changes to Saarstahl's reporting of 
    sales paid by a bill of exchange. Even if a bill of exchange receipt 
    were considered to be equivalent to a cash payment, in these particular 
    circumstances, there is no significant difference in calculating 
    imputed credit between Saarstahl's reporting method, which includes an 
    extra fee charged to the customer to account for either the extra 
    payment period or discounting of the bill at a bank (see Verification 
    Report at pages 23-24), and a methodology based on the actual date cash 
    was received. Therefore, for purposes of this review, we have made no 
    adjustment.
    
    Final Results of the Review
    
        As a result of this review, we have determined that the following 
    margins exist for the period March 1, 1997 through February 28, 1998:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Margin
               Manufacturer/exporter                  Period       (percent)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Saarstahl AG (Saarstahl)...................   3/1/97-2/28/98        0.00
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Department shall determine, and the U.S. Customs Service shall 
    assess, antidumping duties on all appropriate entries. We have 
    calculated an importer-specific assessment rate based on the ratio of 
    the total amount of antidumping duties calculated for the examined 
    sales to the total entered value of those same sales. This rate will be 
    assessed uniformly on all entries of that particular importer made 
    during the POR. The Department will issue appropriate appraisement 
    instructions directly to the Customs Service. In accordance with 19 CFR 
    351.106(c)(2), we will instruct the Customs Service to liquidate 
    without regard to antidumping duties all entries of the subject 
    merchandise during the POR for which the importer-specific assessment 
    rate is zero or de minimis (i.e., less than 0.50 percent).
        Further, the following deposit requirements shall be effective for 
    all shipments of the subject merchandise from Germany that are entered, 
    or withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption on or after the 
    publication date of the final results of this administrative review, as 
    provided for by section 751(a)(1) of the Act: (1) The cash deposit rate 
    for Saarstahl will be the rate established above in the ``Final Results 
    of Review'' section; (2) for previously investigated companies not 
    listed above, the cash deposit rate will continue to be the company-
    specific rate published for the most recent period; (3) if the exporter 
    is not a firm covered in this 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) the cash deposit rate for all other manufacturers 
    or exporters of this merchandise will continue to be 85.05 percent, the 
    all others rate established in the final determination of the LTFV 
    investigation (58 FR 6205, January 27, 1993).
        The deposit requirements, when imposed, shall remain in effect 
    until publication of the final results of the next administrative 
    review.
        This notice serves as a final reminder to importers of their 
    responsibility under 19 CFR 351.402(f) 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 notice serves as the only reminder to parties subject to 
    administrative protective order (APO) of their responsibility 
    concerning the disposition of proprietary information disclosed under 
    APO in accordance with 19 CFR 353.34(d). Timely written notification of 
    return/destruction of APO materials or conversion to judicial 
    protective order is hereby requested. Failure to comply with the 
    regulation and the terms of an APO is a sanctionable violation.
        This administrative review and notice are in accordance with 
    sections 751(a)(1) and 777(i)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.221.
    
        Dated: July 30, 1999.
    Joseph A. Spetrini,
    Acting Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 99-20449 Filed 8-6-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/9/1999
Published:
08/09/1999
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of final results of antidumping duty administrative review.
Document Number:
99-20449
Dates:
August 9, 1999.
Pages:
43146-43149 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-428-811
PDF File:
99-20449.pdf