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Xi'an Metals & Minerals Import & Export Co. v. United States
256 F. Supp. 3d 1346
Ct. Intl. Trade
2017
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Background

  • Administrative review (AR5) of antidumping duty order on certain steel nails from the PRC covering Aug 1, 2012–July 31, 2013; Commerce (ITA) selected Xi'an Metals and Stanley as mandatory respondents and issued final results raising margins for Stanley and Xi'an.
  • ITA selected Thailand as the primary surrogate country and used Thai surrogate values (SWR etc.); Xi'an contended Thai import data were tainted and proposed Philippines or Ukraine as better surrogates.
  • Xi'an raised challenges to surrogate-country selection, valuation of brokerage/handling and freight (including the weight denominator), and alleged double-counting of SG&A labor in the surrogate labor rate.
  • Stanley (consolidated plaintiffs) alleged a ministerial transcription error in their post‑verification FOP database that materially increased their margin, and separately challenged ITA’s differential‑pricing/targeted‑dumping methodology (use of Cohen’s d, ratio test, meaningful‑difference test, and application of A‑T to all sales).
  • ITA applied its differential‑pricing analysis, used Cohen’s d to find significant price differences, concluded a meaningful difference existed, and applied the A‑to‑transaction (A‑T) method (with zeroing) to all Stanley sales; ITA declined to correct Stanley’s alleged transcription ministerial error.
  • Court review limited to whether ITA’s determinations were supported by substantial evidence and in accordance with law; court ordered limited remand for three discrete matters and upheld most of ITA’s differential‑pricing approach.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Suitability of Thailand as primary surrogate (Xi'an) Thai import values are manipulated and Thai SWR prices are aberrant; Philippines or Ukraine are superior surrogates Record evidence does not show Thai SWR data are aberrational; benchmarks offered by Xi'an are unreliable or inapposite Court found substantial evidence supports ITA's Thailand selection; declined to substitute its judgment for Commerce
Effect of Thailand political instability (Xi'an) Military coup and unrest should trigger "reason to believe or suspect" distortion of Thai data Xi'an offered no record evidence showing the coup affected the specific SV data or ITA criteria Court held ITA reasonably concluded coup evidence did not establish unreliability of SV data
B&H/inland freight denominator (Xi'an) Doing Business report denominator (10,000 kg) is inappropriate; ITA should use container maximum or Xi'an's average load Xi'an failed to raise this argument at Commerce (exhaustion); surrogate data must come from surrogate country; Doing Business denominator is supported by record Court dismissed claim for lack of exhaustion and declined relief
Double‑counting of labor in surrogate financial ratios (Xi'an) Thai NSO labor rate includes benefits and nonproduction labor; Commerce should adjust SG&A ratios to avoid double‑counting ITA relied on surrogate company classifications and Labor Methodologies; respondents did not report SG&A hours so SG&A labor belongs in ratios Court remanded: ITA must address double‑counting, and if it keeps a labor source that includes all labor/benefits, it must adjust financial‑ratio denominators to avoid double‑counting
Ministerial transcription error in Stanley FOP database (Stanley) Omitted zero in V_DLCROD field materially overstated low‑carbon SWR FOP and increased dumping margin; ITA should correct as ministerial error ITA limits ministerial corrections to its own errors and will correct respondent errors only when "so egregious and so obvious"; it deemed this not ministerial Court ordered remand: the transcription error was obvious and remand requires ITA to correct it
Differential‑pricing / targeted‑dumping methodology (Stanley) Cohen's d and ITA's tests are inappropriate, biased, mechanistic; A‑T applied to all sales violates limiting rule; statute requires statistical significance ITA's Cohen's d, ratio, and meaningful‑difference tests are reasonable gap‑filling exercises; statistical significance unnecessary because ITA analyzes full population; ITA found >66% passing and a meaningful difference Court upheld ITA's differential‑pricing framework and its use of Cohen's d and related tests generally, but remanded because ITA applied A‑T to all sales in contravention of the regulation's "limited to sales that constitute targeted dumping" limiting rule

Key Cases Cited

  • Consol. Edison Co. v. NLRB, 305 U.S. 197 (agency findings are supported if a reasonable mind could accept the evidence)
  • Consolo v. Fed. Mar. Comm'n, 383 U.S. 607 (courts should not substitute their judgment for reasonable agency determinations)
  • Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. United States, 750 F.2d 927 (two inconsistent conclusions from same evidence can still support agency finding)
  • NTN Bearing Corp. v. United States, 74 F.3d 1204 (Commerce has duty to determine dumping margins as accurately as possible and correct ministerial errors)
  • Mid Continent Nail Corp. v. United States, 846 F.3d 1364 (invalidated Commerce's withdrawal of prior targeted‑dumping regulation — relevant to limits on agency procedure)
  • Apex Frozen Foods Private Ltd. v. United States, 862 F.3d 1322 (upholding Commerce's use of alternative method where A‑A could not account for price differences)
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Case Details

Case Name: Xi'an Metals & Minerals Import & Export Co. v. United States
Court Name: United States Court of International Trade
Date Published: Sep 6, 2017
Citation: 256 F. Supp. 3d 1346
Docket Number: Consol. 15-00109
Court Abbreviation: Ct. Intl. Trade