In Gray Portland Cement and Cement Clinker From Mexico, 55 Fed.Reg. 35,371 (ITC 1990), the United States International Trade Commission (“ITC”) determined that a regional domestic industry in the United States was materially injured by reason of cement imports from Mexico. CEMEX, S.A., a Mexican producer of cement, appeals from the determination, and now moves for judgment on the agency record. ITC’s determination is affirmed.
I.
BACKGROUND
The Ad Hoe Committee of AZ-NM-TX-FL Producers of Gray Portland Cement (“Ad Hoc Committee”) represents certain cement producers with production facilities in Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and Florida. On September 26, 1989, Ad Hoc Committee filed a petition with ITC and the Department of Commerce (“Commerce”), alleging injury to a United States industry by reason of less than fair value (“LTFV”) imports of gray portland cement and cement clinker from Mexico. ITC and Commerce issued affirmative preliminary determinations. See Gray Portland Cement and Cement Clinker From Mexico, USITC Pub. 2235, Inv. No. 731-TA-451 (Nov.1989); Gray Portland Cement and Clinker From Mexico, 55 Fed.Reg. 13,817 (Dep’t Comm.1990).
ITC reached a final determination on August 13, 1990, and issued an opinion on August 23, 1990. Gray Portland Cement and Cement Clinker From Mexico, USITC Pub. 2305, Inv. No. 731-TA-451 (Aug.1990) (“Final Det.”). It determined that a United States industry, composed of producers of gray portland cement and cement clinker in the southern-tier states, was materially injured by reason of LTFV imports of cement and cement clinker from Mexico.
Prior to the final determination, a committee of cement producers in Southern California had filed a petition with ITC and Commerce alleging material injury due to LTFV cement imports from Japan. By the time of the final determination in this case, ITC had made a preliminary affirmative determination in the Japanese case, (Gray Portland Cement and Cement Clinker From Japan, USITC Pub. 2297, Inv. No. 731-TA-461 (July 1990) (“Japan Cement ”)), but Commerce had not issued its preliminary or final determinations regarding LTFV sales.
II.
ITC DETERMINATION
Three Commissioners participated in ITC’s final determination. Commissioner Rohr made a negative determination, which is not at issue. Acting Chairman Bruns-dale and Commissioner Lodwick made affirmative determinations, and each issued an opinion. Both opinions are challenged here.
Acting Chairman Brunsdale first determined that cement and cement clinker comprise a single like product. She then found that a regional industry analysis was appropriate, and that the regional industry consisted of producers in the southern-tier states of California, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi *292 and Florida. She determined that cumulation was mandatory, and cumulatively assessed the volume and price effects of Mexican and Japanese imports into the region: her consideration of Japanese imports was based on the allegations in the Japanese case, as recalculated by Commerce. She then considered whether there was material injury to the domestic industry based on the statutory factors. She found that the financial performance of the southern-tier producers had deteriorated during the period of investigation, and applied an elasticities analysis to determine the volume, price and overall effect of the dumped imports on the domestic industry. She concluded that the domestic industry was materially injured by reason of LTFV imports from Mexico. Finally, she found that the statutory requirements for injury in a regional investigation had been met, and that all producers were injured because they were not insulated from the general effect of the injurious imports.
Commissioner Lodwick’s determination was based on a slightly different analysis. He concurred with Acting Chairman Bruns-dale’s findings about like product, regional industry, and cumulation. He then found deterioration in the financial performance of the domestic industry, and considered whether there was material injury by reason of LTFV imports. He found evidence of a significant volume of imports, underselling, depression of domestic prices, and an adverse impact on the domestic injury. Based on all these factors, he found material injury by reason of LTFV imports from Mexico. Finally, he concluded that the statutory criteria for injury in a regional investigation had been met because the effect of the imports was felt throughout the region, and there was no evidence to indicate that individual producers were not injured.
III.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
ITC’s determination shall be upheld unless it is “unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B) (1988).
IV.
DISCUSSION
A. Regional Industry Analysis
CEMEX challenges ITC’s regional industry analysis on two grounds: misinterpretation of the “all or almost all” standard; and failure to employ a disaggregate analysis, or an aggregate approach with a safeguard to ensure an accurate finding is made.
1. “All, or Almost All” Standard
ITC’s task is to determine whether an industry in the United States is materially injured, or threatened with material injury by reason of imports or sales at LTFV. See 19 U.S.C. § 1673d(b)(l) (1988). An industry consists of “domestic producers as a whole of a like product, or those producers whose collective output of the like product constitutes a major proportion of the total domestic production of that product.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677(4)(A) (1988) (emphasis added). Under certain circumstances set forth in the statute, ITC may divide the United States into two or more regional markets, and treat producers in each market as a separate industry. 19 U.S.C. § 1677(4)(C) (1988). In such cases, material injury to an industry may be found “if the producers of all, or almost all, of the production” within the regional market suffer material injury due to the dumped imports. Id. (emphasis added) (“regional injury provision”). 1
*293 Here, ITC found that the region consisted of producers in the southern-tier states; it then found material injury to producers of “all or almost all” of the cement production in the region. Final Det., at 51, 66. CEMEX argues, however, that the decision is flawed because the “all or almost all” language requires a finding of material injury to eighty or eighty-five percent of production, and no such finding was made in this case. CEMEX bases its argument on case law and ITC practice under a parallel statutory provision. This authority is not persuasive.
CEMEX cites the
Atlantic Sugar
eases.
2
In
Atlantic Sugar, Ltd. v. United States,
CEMEX notes that in addition to the regional injury provision, the “all or almost all” language is found in a second place in 19 U.S.C. § 1677(4)(C). See supra, n. 1. This second provision states that ITC may adopt a regional industry approach if producers within the region sell “all or almost all” of their production in that region (“regional market provision”). CEMEX argues that ITC interprets the regional market provision to require at least an eighty percent threshold, and that this interpretation is relevant in the first context.
*294
It is true, as CEMEX claims, that the court may apply parallel constructions when a phrase appears more than once in the same provision of a statute.
See United States v. Nunez,
In short, there is nothing in the statute, case law, or administrative practice to indicate Congressional intent to bind ITC to a precise numerical percentage. Indeed, the legislative history in the analogous context of a nationwide investigation indicates that Congress intended determinations to be made on a case-by-case basis. See S.Rep. No. 249, 96th Cong., 1st Sess., at 83 (1979) (“[w]hat constitutes a major proportion of total domestic production will vary from case to case depending on the facts, and no standard minimum proportion is required in each case”); H.R.Rep. No. 317, 96th Cong., 1st Sess., at 73 (1979) (“phrase ‘major proportion of total domestic production’ cannot be defined with mathematical precision, and the application of the phrase will therefore vary from case to case”). Thus, ITC’s determination is not contrary to law simply for failure to apply a fixed percentage test in the range of eighty to eighty-five percent.
2. Aggregate or Disaggregate Analysis
In determining whether producers of “all or almost all” of the production have been injured, CEMEX claims, in essence, that a disaggregate analysis using individual plant data is required. CEMEX argues that analysis of aggregate data, without examination of individual plant information, leads to erroneous results. CEMEX claims an aggregate analysis was used in this case.
ITC has broad discretion in the choice of its methodology.
See Smith-Corona Group v. United States,
Neither the statute nor case law cited by CEMEX requires a particular method of
*295
analysis in a regional industry investigation. In fact, CEMEX has cited only -one decision in which this court required a producer-by-producer analysis.
See Atlantic Sugar III,
Nevertheless, although a pure producer-by-producer analysis is not required by statute, examination of individual plant information can highlight anomalies that an aggregate analysis would disguise. Indeed, in other cases ITC has considered the condition of regional industries on the basis of aggregate data, then considered certain plant-specific information to ensure that the “all or almost all” standard is satisfied. See, e.g., Certain Welded Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes From Taiwan, USITC Pub. 1994, at 13-15, Inv. No. 731-TA-349 (July 1987) (final); Rock Salt From Canada, USITC Pub. 1658, at 12 n. 28, Inv. No. 731-TA-239 (Mar.1985) (preliminary). 6 ITC did not deviate from this general approach here.
ITC gathered plant-specific information (s
ee
List No. 2, Doc. 30, App. E), and the Commissioners are presumed to have considered all evidence in the record.
Metallverken Nederland B.V. v. United States,
14 CIT —, —,
The Mexican producers had argued that the “all or almost all” standard was not satisfied because: (1) domestic producers brought in a large percentage of Mexican imports which they were responsible for pricing; and (2) a substantial number of producers were not injured because imports either were not present or did not constitute an important factor in their local marketing areas. Acting Chairman Bruns-dale rejected these arguments because: (1) the decision by domestic producers to import rather than produce was based in part on the low price of Mexican imports; and (2) data concerning the plant-by-plant effects of the dumped imports was unreliable. Final Det., at 48-51. 7 She concluded that the evidence was sufficient to satisfy the “all or almost all” standard based on her finding that cement is “quite substitutable” and “there are no product differences *296 that would shield some producers from the injury being suffered by others.” 8 Final Det., at 48.
As for Commissioner Lodwick, he explicitly states that he examined the record pertaining to individual producers. Final Det., at 66 n. 53. Like Acting Chairman Brunsdale, he rejected the argument that a substantial number of producers were not injured because imports were not present in their marketing areas, or did not play an important role. He found that producers throughout the region were affected due to the “ripple effect,” or the practice of transporting shipments from the area of competition to surrounding areas, where, in turn, other shipments were displaced. Final Det., at 66 n. 52. 9
The record indicates that the Commissioners considered appropriate plant-specific information in determining whether producers of “all or almost all” production were affected by the dumped imports. It appears, however, that the Commissioners simply did not accept the argument that certain producers were not injured by the dumped imports. Thus, the court concludes that a complete disaggregate analysis is not required; to the extent that some safeguard is required to assure that the “all or almost all” standard is met, it was satisfied by examination of data regarding individual plants. CEMEX has not demonstrated that ITC’s conclusions regarding this data were unsupported by substantial evidence.
B. Cumulation
To determine the volume and effects of imports, Acting Chairman Brunsdale cumu-lated Mexican imports with Japanese imports subject to investigation in Japan Cement, and considered the dumping margins alleged in that case in her elasticities analysis. 10 CEMEX claims that reliance on the Japanese dumping margins violates the statute and due process because the margins were unverified. Ad Hoc Committee and the government maintain that CEMEX has waived this argument.
A litigant may not raise an issue for the first time on appeal.
See Wieland Werke, AG v. United States,
ITC is permitted to cumulate imports that are subject to investigation as of the date of the Commission’s vote in the investigation before it.
See Chaparral Steel Co. v. United States,
More important for purposes of waiver is the fact that Ad Hoc Committee filed a prehearing brief in this case in which it argued in favor of cumulation of Mexican and Japanese imports, and factored into its suggested analysis the alleged Japanese margins. See List No. 1, Doc. 161, at 25-29; List No. 2, Doc. 13, Econ.App. G, at 18 & Table 2. CEMEX’s only response was that cumulation was improper because the Japanese and Mexican investigations involved different regional industries. List No. 1, Doc. 163, at 57-62. At no time did CEMEX argue that reliance on the unverified margins was error, nor did it raise the constitutional and policy arguments it raises for the first time before this court. Had it done so, Acting Chairman Brunsdale might have reconsidered her methodology, or at least the issue would have been discussed and preserved for review by this court. Accordingly, CEMEX has waived arguments concerning the use of alleged Japanese margins.
Despite its failure to raise the issue below, CEMEX urges the court to address the issue of the alleged margins. The interests of justice do not compel such a result: Acting Chairman Brunsdale did not simply accept the alleged margins as fixed percentages. She considered in her analysis the likelihood that the margins might diminish, which they did. Final Det., at 34 n. 80. The final margins, however, did not diminish to a low level, but remained “relatively high,” which is the term used by Acting Chairman Brunsdale to describe the Mexican margins. Id. at 34. In fact, ultimately the Japanese margins were determined to be very close to the Mexican margins. The final margins are not part of the record. The court simply points out that the surrounding circumstances do not call for application of some exception to the general rule of exhaustion. '
C. Price Underselling and Price Suppression or Depression
In determining whether there is material injury, ITC is required to consider the following factors: volume of imports; price effect of imports; impact of imports on production operations; and other relevant economic factors. 19 U.S.C. § 1677(7)(B) (1988). In evaluating the price effect of imports, ITC is to consider whether:
(I) there has been significant price underselling by the imported merchandise as compared with the price of like products of the United States, and
(II) the effect of imports of such merchandise otherwise depresses prices to a significant degree or prevents price in-creáses, which otherwise would have occurred, to a significant degree.
19 U.S.C. § 1677(7)(C)(ii) (1988). CEMEX claims several errors with respect to ITC’s determination under this provision.
Commissioner Lodwick examined price data for Japanese imports to determine *298 whether underselling occurred. Final Det, at 62. This price information was drawn from price tables in the confidential staff report in the Japanese investigation. Id. at 62 n. 40. CEMEX claims the price data was not part of the record in this case, and Commissioner Lodwick erred when he relied on it.
Although the price tables were incorporated by reference into the record (see Final Det., at A-74 n. 91) (citing Japan Cement, USITC Pub. No. 2297, at A-72 to A-85), 11 they were confidential and were not released to the parties. Nevertheless, CE-MEX was not prejudiced because the questionnaire responses on which the price tables were based were released to the parties under an administrative protective order on July 11, 1990. See List No. 2, Doc. 33F. As the price information was part of the record, Commissioner Lodwick’s consideration of this information was entirely appropriate. 12
CEMEX also argues Commissioner Lod-wick’s conclusion about price underselling rests on erroneous data. ITC sent questionnaires to United States importers and producers requesting information about sales within a certain volume range (300-700 tons).
According to CEMEX, the majority of producers did not comply with the request. Over seventy percent of reported producer sales were for quantities either above or below the stipulated range. In contrast, according to CEMEX, over seventy percent of reported importer sales were for quantities within the stipulated range. ITC staff calculated weighted-average sales prices based on all reported sales, and did not limit its calculations to sales within the range. CEMEX claims that comparisons within the volume range do not support a finding of underselling, at least not to the same degree. CEMEX claims Commissioner Lodwick might have reached a different conclusion concerning price effects had comparable volumes been used.
Contrary to arguments of Ad Hoc Committee and the government, CEMEX raised this argument before ITC and has preserved it for review.
See
List No. 1, Doc. 163, at Ex. 39. Nevertheless, the argument fails. It is based on the premise that volume discounts exist, yet there is absolutely no evidence
in this case
to indicate volume discounting. Moreover, a finding of underselling is not crucial to an affirmative determination. A finding of suppressive price effects may be sufficient.
Florex v. United States,
13 CIT —, —,
CEMEX also claims error because Acting Chairman Brunsdale did not discuss price underselling in her opinion. 13 CEMEX argues consideration of price underselling is required by statute. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(7)(C)(ii)(I). To determine the price effect of imports, ITC is required to consider whether price underselling occurred. Id. Although ITC is required to explain its *299 analysis of price effects, see 19 U.S.C. § 1677(7)(B), there is no requirement that it set forth its findings concerning underselling. Acting Chairman Brunsdale found that dumped imports depressed or suppressed domestic prices. Final Det., at 46. It appears that she does not find anecdotal evidence of underselling or lack thereof determinative. To require findings of underselling would be inconsistent with the proposition that price suppression or depression is sufficient.
Finally, CEMEX argues that both Commissioner Lodwick’s and Acting Chairman Brunsdale’s findings with respect to price depression or suppression were erroneous because they must necessarily depend on an incomplete investigation of Japanese price data. This is not a ground for finding the determination unsupported. See supra n. 12. Also, CEMEX appears to argue that Acting Chairman Brunsdale may not have considered any price data to confirm her general economic conclusions; specifically, CEMEX argues that she did not relate prices of imports to declining or suppressed domestic prices. It appears that Acting Chairman Brunsdale is not making general economic conclusions, but is attempting to draw conclusions about the effect of actual prices through use of economic theory. To the extent that CEMEX asks the court to conclude that Acting Chairman Brunsdale ignores pertinent information in the record, the court declines to do so. There is no basis for such a conclusion. Furthermore, CEMEX cites no persuasive authority, and the statute does not require ITC to assess the price-depressing or suppressing effects of imports in any particular manner. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(7)(C)(ii).
V.
CONCLUSION
As ITC’s determination was based on substantial evidence and CEMEX has failed to demonstrate legal error, the determination is affirmed.
Notes
. 19 U.S.C. § 1677(4)(C) provides, in part:
In appropriate circumstances, the United States, for a particular product market, may be divided into 2 or more markets and the producers within each market may be treated as if they were a separate industry if—
(i) the producers within such market sell all or almost all of their production of the like product in question in that market, and
(ii) the demand in that market is not supplied, to any substantial degree, by producers of the product in question located elsewhere in the United States.
*293 In such appropriate circumstances, material injury, the threat of material injury ... may be found to exist with respect to an industry ... if there is a concentration of subsidized or dumped imports into such an isolated market and if the producers of all, or almost all, of the production within that market are being materially injured or threatened by material injury.... 19 U.S.C. § 1677(4)(C) (1988) (emphasis added).
. The Atlantic Sugar cases involved judicial review of the ITC determination in Sugars and Sirups from Canada, USITC Pub. 1047, Inv. No. 731-TA-3 (Mar.1980), in which ITC held that LTFV sugar imports from Canada in 1978 and 1979 caused material injury to a regional industry in the United States.
The
Atlantic Sugar
cases may be found at the following citations:
Atlantic Sugar, Ltd.
v.
United States,
On appeal, the Federal Circuit reversed
Atlantic Sugar V,
and reinstated the ITC determination.
Atlantic Sugar,
. The court noted:
If this point is reached in the administrative determinations the Court does not presently see how the remaining 76 percent of production can be considered to be "all or almost all.” It would seem that the plain meaning of this statutory requirement could only be satisfied by a percentage which came closer to being all the production. Nevertheless, ... the Court will not foreclose the possibility of such a conclusion at this time.
. CEMEX’s reliance on a decision of the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, which construed language similar to that found in the regional injury provision, is misplaced. Without passing on the precedential value of cases from the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, it is sufficient to note that the Tribunal has not established the fixed percentage analysis that CEMEX advocates. See Fertilizer Equipment, 14 C.E.R. 290, 304-305 (1987) ("all” means 100 percent, and "almost all” means close to 100 percent; seventy-five percent falls short of all or almost all).
. CEMEX also cites
Copperweld Corp. v. United States,
. In a recent case, ITC stated that a producer-by-producer analysis is inappropriate, but noted that ITC “has generally considered the condition of regional industries on an aggregated basis, and has looked to individual producer information as a secondary matter.” Gray Portland Cement and Cement Clinker From Japan, USITC Pub. 2376, at 22-23 n. 51, Inv. No. 731-TA-461 (Apr.1991) (views of Commissioners Lodwick and Newquist).
. Specifically, Acting Chairman Brunsdale found:
First, the material was not presented with sufficient transparency to allow assessment of the methodology’s correctness. Secondly, it seems to me that the effects of the imports should be analyzed in each local market and these effects then averaged to obtain the effects on each plant rather than averaging the values of the various parameters, such as the level of the unfair imports, to obtain a plant level value. Finally, petitioners raised serious questions about the appropriateness of adjusting for the cost of transportation separately for each market while assuming the dumping margin remained constant throughout the region.
Final Det., at 51 n. 120.
. CEMEX argues that Acting Chairman Bruns-dale's conclusion that cement is fungible is contradicted by another part of the opinion, in which she found that cement was not "perfectly" fungible due to high transportation costs. See Final Det., at 37. CEMEX has misstated the Commissioner's findings. The Commissioner found that the elasticity of substitution between domestic cement and imports was in the range of 5 to 7. Id. at 38. This was lower than argued by the domestic producers (who contended it should be 10), higher than contended by the Mexican producers (who contended it should be 5), and in the lower end of the range proposed by ITC staff (5-10). Thus, there is no real contradiction between her findings that cement is "quite” substitutable for purposes of the regional injury determination and her conclusion that it is not "perfectly" substitutable for purposes of the elasticities analysis.
In any event, based on the record before the court, I find that her consideration of transportation costs for purposes of the elasticities analysis adequately accounts for the effects on individual producers of any uneven distribution of the dumped cement. See Final Det., at 45-46 n. 109.
. In its reply brief, CEMEX argues that the Commissioner’s findings concerning the "ripple effect” were not based on evidence in the record. CEMEX is incorrect. See List No. 1, Doc. 33, Ex. 3, at 7-8 and 10-11 (written testimony of Jon R. Thompson) (describing “ripple” effects of competition from Mexican imports and displacement of domestic cement from southern and coastal Texas to northern markets); List No. 1, Doc. 161, Econ.App. A, at 27-28 (even if sold only in coastal area, imports affect prices inland through "ripple” or "spillover” effect). The producers’ questionnaire responses also contain evidence concerning the ripple effect.
. Although the dumping margins were drawn from the preliminary determination in Japan Cement, the Acting Chair noted that, except for certain refinements, the margins were as alleged by petitioner. Final Det., at 34 n. 80. Use of alleged as opposed to preliminary margins is not significant for purposes of this discussion because, as Ad Hoc Committee points out, both are unverified by Commerce.
. Apparently, the citation in the final determination in this case is to the confidential version of the report in Japan Cement. In the public version, the price tables are found elsewhere. See Japan Cement, at A-56 to A-57.
. CEMEX also argues that the price information from the investigation in Japan Cement was “incomplete” and does not constitute substantial evidence. This argument is meritless. In cases involving cumulation, commissioners may have to rely on incomplete investigations. Commissioner Lodwick relied on the Japanese price information for his finding that underselling occurred in Orange County, California. The information was given appropriate weight in his determination, and CEMEX does not even allege that the information was inaccurate.
. In the alternative, CEMEX argues that if Acting Commissioner Brunsdale considered price underselling, her opinion was flawed, as was Commissioner Lodwick's, for failure to consider volume discounting. The court’s discussion of Commissioner Lodwick’s decision disposes of this argument.
