Opinion for the court filed by Chief Judge MAYER. Circuit Judge PLAGER concurs in the result.
Saarstahl AG (“Saarstahl”) and the United States appeal the judgment of the Court of International Trade, Court No. 93-04-00219,
Saarstahl AG v. United States,
Background
Between 1978 and 1985, Saarstahl Volk-lingen GmbH (“SVK”) received subsidies from the governments of Germany (“Germany”) and Saarland (“Saarland”), all of which contained a repayment obligation, known as RZV, which arose if SVK turned a profit. During this period, Arbed Luxembourg owned SVK, but, in 1985, considered closing operations. As a result of SVK’s importance to the region, Saarland and Germany sought another owner and, in 1986, became majority owners to facili
*1317
tate this end.
See Saarstahl VI,
In 1992, Commerce initiated separate countervailing duty investigations of Dillinger and Saarstahl.
See Certain Steel Prods, from Germany,
58 Fed.Reg. 37,315 (Dep’t Comm. July 9, 1993) (final affirm, determ.)
(“Final Steel Products
”) (Dillinger);
Final Lead Bar, 58
Fed.Reg. at 6233 (Saarstahl). Initially, in the Saar-stahl investigation, Commerce classified the governments’ abandonment of the RZVs as debt forgiveness, instead of grants bestowed in the years the RZVs were made.
See Final Lead Bar,
Commerce’s policy on repayment of subsidies during privatization transactions continued to evolve, however, and on July 9, 1993, it published its methodology for measuring subsidies that survive a privatization transaction. See General Issues Appendix, 58 Fed.Reg. 37,225, 37,259-73 (Dep’t Comm. July 9, 1993). Commerce maintained that subsidies travel to a private or privatized company unless they are repaid, and announced methodologies for determining the amount of repayment. See id. Commerce then requested and received a remand in the Saarstahl case to apply its new privatization methodology. Commerce determined that the governments’ RZV forgiveness was a subsidy benefiting SVK, which passed through to DHS during privatization to the extent the purchase price did not repay it. See Remand Determination I at 2-6; see also General Issues Appendix, 58 Fed.Reg. at 37,271-72. Commerce did not revisit its characterization of the RZVs’ abandonment as debt forgiveness because that issue was beyond the scope of the remand. See Remand Determination I at 16-17.
Saarstahl appealed the determination to the Court of International Trade, which held that Commerce’s privatization methodology was unlawful and developed a new one.
See Saarstahl AG v. United States,
In response, the Court of International Trade remanded the case to Commerce, instructing it to follow
British Steel PLC v. United States,
Thereafter, the Court of International Trade addressed Saarstahl’s Motion to Amend its Complaint to challenge Commerce’s decision to allocate the benefits of the nonrecurring subsidies over fifteen years, based on United States tax tables, instead of the actual average useful life of the physical assets. Although it had struck down this methodology in
British Steel plc v. United States,
The parties then moved for a decision on the non-privatization issues.
See Saar-stahl VI,
On remand, Commerce determined that SVK was not creditworthy in 1989 by examining SVK’s financial information for the three years prior to the receipt of the subsidy, which “[a]s a practical matter ... means ... the last three completed fiscal years.”
Remand Determination III
at 2-4, 6. This information revealed that “the company was in very poor financial health.”
Id.
at 3. Although Saarstahl argued that Commerce should have considered SVK’s future financial prospects, such as the impending privatization, Commerce found that Saarstahl “never provided for the administrative record any market studies, country or industry economic forecasts or any other information regarding the company’s prospects after privatization.”
Id.
at 5. Saarstahl appealed the determination to the Court of International Trade, arguing that Commerce should have considered SVK’s 1989 financial information and future prospects.
See Saarstahl VII,
Discussion
“In reviewing a decision by the Court of International Trade to affirm the agency’s final determination, we apply anew the court’s statutorily-mandated standard of review to the administrative review.”
Wheatland Tube Co. v. United States,
“[N]either the statute nor the legislative history offers guidance to Commerce in determining the amount of a prior subsidy, if any, that is repaid through the purchase price of a privatization.”
British Steel PLC v. United States,
In
Saarstahl I,
“the [trial] court did not accord sufficient deference to Commerce’s” repayment methodology.
Saarstahl II,
Saarstahl has raised other challenges to the Court of International Trade’s decision to sustain Commerce’s determination that (1) the private banks’ debt forgiveness bestowed a subsidy and (2) the RZVs were interest-free, contingent liability loans, the forgiveness of which bestowed a subsidy equaling their face-value. Saarstahl argues that its due process rights were violated because the Court of International Trade sustained Commerce’s determination of these issues “by refus[ing] to consider any of [its] specific arguments ... and simply ‘conclusively1 applying] ... its holding in
British Steel IV.”
We think it is clear that the court sustained Commerce’s decision on these issues based on its reasoning in
British Steel IV,
Saarstahl also appeals the Court of International Trade’s decision to deny its motion to amend its complaint. We cannot overturn this decision unless the court abused its discretion.
See Intrepid v. Pollock,
Finally, Saarstahl appeals the Court of International Trade’s decision to sustain Commerce’s determination that SVK was uncreditworthy in 1989, arguing that Commerce should have considered SVK’s 1989 financial information and future prospects. We have considered the arguments of all the parties and affirm on the basis of the trial court’s opinion.
Conclusion
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of International Trade is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
.
British Steel IV
held that (1) substantial evidence supports Commerce’s determination that the abandonment of the RZVs in 1989 was a countervailable event in the form of debt forgiveness because the RZVs bore a repayment obligation, which is the hallmark of debt; (2) Commerce’s valuation of the subsidy bestowed by this debt forgiveness was based on a reasonable interpretation of the proposed regulation, noting that “the unen-cumbering of future profits was a benefit equal to the amount of the liability that was extinguished,” which is the RZVs’ face-value; and (3) Commerce’s characterization of the private banks’ debt forgiveness as a subsidy bestowed through government action was "based upon a permissible construction of the statute.”
