snr roulements
SNR ROULEMENTS, ET AL. V. UNITED STATES,
Slip Op. 00-131 (October 13, 2000)
FINAL RESULTS OF REDETERMINATION PURSUANT TO COURT REMAND
SUMMARY
The Department of Commerce has prepared these final results of redetermination pursuant to the
remand order from the U.S. Court of International Trade in SNR Roulements, SKF USA Inc., SKF
France S.A. and SARMA v. United States, Slip Op. 00-131 (October 13, 2000). In accordance with the
U.S. Court of International Trade's instructions, we have made changes to our calculations with respect
to SNR Roulements that resulted in the following weighted-average margins for the period May 1,
1995, through April 30, 1996: 8.59 percent for ball bearings and 10.14 percent for cylindrical roller
bearings. The remand did not result in a change in the margins for SKF France S.A.
BACKGROUND
On October 13, 2000, the U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT) issued an order in SNR
Roulements, SKF USA Inc., SKF France S.A. and SARMA v. United States, Slip Op. 00-131 (October
13, 2000) (SNR v. U.S.), remanding to the Department of Commerce (the Department) the final results
in Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered Roller Bearings) and Parts Thereof From France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, Romania, Singapore, Sweden and the United Kingdom; Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews, 62 FR 54043 (October 17, 1997), and Antifriction Bearings
(Other Than Tapered Roller Bearings) and Parts Thereof From France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Romania,
Singapore; Sweden and the United Kingdom; Amended Final Results of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Reviews, 62 FR 61963 (November 20, 1997) (collectively, AFBs 7). In SNR v. U.S.,
the Court remanded the final results to the Department to make the following changes to its
determination in AFBs 7: 1) annul all findings and conclusions made pursuant to the duty-absorption
inquiry conducted for this review; and 2) include all expenses included in "total United States expenses"
in the calculation of "total expenses" for SNR Roulements (SNR). The remand affects SNR and SKF
France S.A. (SKF) with respect to the antidumping duty orders on ball bearings (BBs), cylindrical roller
bearings (CRBs), and spherical plain bearings (SPBs) from France for the period May 1, 1995, through
April 30, 1996.
On November 27, 2000, we released the draft results of redetermination and invited interested
parties to comment.
DISCUSSION
Duty Absorption
The Court remanded AFBs 7 to the Department to annul all findings and conclusions made
pursuant to the duty-absorption inquiry it conducted in AFBs 7.
The Department hereby complies with the remand as directed by the Court with respect to SNR
and SKF and annuls all findings and conclusions made pursuant to its duty-absorption inquiry
conducted for the subject reviews with respect to SNR and SKF. Upon a final and conclusive court
decision, we will publish an amended final results of review to that effect. This change has no effect on
the respondents' weighted-average margins or duty-assessment rates.
However, the Department interprets section 751(a)(4) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended,
(the Act) to mean that it has authority to conduct a duty-absorption inquiry in the second and fourth
reviews and is not precluded from conducting duty-absorption inquiries in reviews other than those
specified under section 751(a)(4) of the Act. On April 14, 2000, the Department presented a motion to
the Court to modify its ruling in a related proceeding on the ground that the Court had erred as a matter
of law. See Defendant's Motion for Rehearing and Modification of the Court's Decision, Slip Op. 00-28, and Accompanying Order of March 22, 2000, filed in Court No. 99-08-00473 (CIT April 14, 2000).
That motion in the related proceeding set forth the Department's position on the matter (i.e., that the
Court erred in nullifying the Department's duty-absorption inquiry). As such, there is no need to repeat
it here. The United States has filed a notice of appeal with the United States Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit regarding the CIT's adverse decision in Slip Op. 00-28 (March 22, 2000) on the issue of
the duty-absorption inquiry.
Comment: Torrington concurs with the Department's position but argues that the remand
results should be modified to indicate that Torrington has also appealed the decision in SKF USA Inc. v.
United States, Slip Op. 00-28 (CIT March 22, 2000). Torrington argues further that the Department
should state that it believes that the CIT exceeded its power on judicial review when it ordered the
Department to annul its determination.
Department's Position: We confirm that Torrington has, as indicated in its brief, also appealed
the CIT's decision in the aforementioned proceeding. As indicated above, we have respectfully stated
our belief that the CIT erred in nullifying our duty-absorption findings.
Constructed-Export-Price (CEP) Profit Calculation
The Court remanded our calculation of CEP profit for SNR, finding that section 772 of the Act
requires us to include all expenses included in "total United States expenses" (including imputed credit
expense and imputed inventory-carrying costs) in the calculation of "total expenses" when we calculate
CEP profit. Accordingly, we have complied with the Court's instruction by including imputed credit
expense and imputed inventory-carrying costs in the calculation of total expenses in our calculation of
CEP profit for SNR. However, in reviewing our calculations for the final results of redetermination, we
discovered that this change had the unintended result of affecting our calculation of "total actual profit"
because the program calculates "total actual profit" using the variable for "total expenses." To correct
this inadvertent error, we restored the "total actual profit" calculation for the final results of
redetermination, while continuing to include imputed credit expense and imputed inventory-carrying
costs in the calculation of total expenses when we calculate the CEP-profit ratio.
Comment: Torrington argues that the Department's calculation of SNR's CEP-profit ratio was
supported by substantial evidence and is in accordance with law. Torrington asserts that the
Department's methodology recognizes that SNR USA is a related entity, whose recorded expenses may
reflect the shifting of costs to the related parent in France. Torrington contends that the Department
avoids any under-allocation of CEP profit by including imputed expenses in the U.S. expenses to which
the Department applies the CEP ratio. Torrington believes that the CEP ratio should be calculated on
actual expenses only. Accordingly, Torrington argues that the Department should state that it disagrees
with the CIT's decision and that it believes that the CIT exceeded its power on judicial review.
Department's Position: We respectfully reaffirm our position that it is appropriate to base the
CEP-profit ratio on actual expenses as indicated in the wording of section 772(f)(1) of the Act, which
directs us to calculate CEP profit on the basis of "total actual profit." As discussed below, the
Department's practice with respect to imputed costs is reasonable. Furthermore, recent court decisions
support the Department's interpretation concerning the calculation of the CEP-profit ratio.
Normal accounting principles only permit the deduction of actual booked expenses, not imputed
expenses, in calculating profit. Inventory-carrying costs and credit expenses are imputed expenses, not
actual booked expenses, so we have established a practice of not including them in the calculation of
total actual profit. See, e.g., Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties; Final Rule, 62 FR at 27317,
27354 (May 19, 1997), Import Administration Policy Bulletin number 97/1, issued on September 4,
1997, concerning the Calculation of Profit for Constructed Export Price Transactions, at 3 and note 5,
Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered Roller Bearings) and Parts Thereof From France, et al; Final
Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews and Partial Termination of Administrative
Reviews, 62 FR 2081, 2127 (January 15, 1997), and Notice of Final Results of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review; Canned Pineapple Fruit from Thailand, 63 FR 7392, 7395 (February 13, 1998).
Likewise, since the cost of the U.S. and home-market merchandise includes the actual booked interest
expenses, it is not appropriate to include imputed interest amounts as well in total expenses. Doing so
double-counts this expense to a certain extent and overstates the cost attributed to sales of this
merchandise. This overstatement of cost understates the ratio of U.S. selling expenses to total expenses
and consequently understates the amount of actual profit allocated to selling, distribution, and further-manufacturing activities in the United States.
In addition, there is another inconsistency. Although the imputed credit expenses and imputed
inventory-carrying costs incurred on sales of the subject merchandise in the United States are included
in "total United States expenses," inclusion of these items in the calculation of "total expenses" as
directed by the CIT distorts the ratio of U.S. selling expenses to total expenses. The change we have
made pursuant to the CIT's order results in the addition of imputed expenses incurred on sales of the
subject merchandise in the United States, but it does not result in the addition of imputed expenses
incurred on sales of the foreign like product sold in the exporting country (i.e., the latter expenses are
not included in "total United States expenses"). This cumulation of expenses on sales of the subject
merchandise sold in the United States in a manner that is inconsistent with the cumulation of expenses
on sales of the foreign like product sold in the exporting country is distortive.
Finally, in this case the CIT ruled that "Commerce improperly excluded imputed inventory and
carrying costs from 'total expenses' when it had included these expenses in 'total United States
expenses.'" The CIT concluded that, "since Commerce determined that imputed inventory and carrying
costs were to be included in 'total United States expenses,' they must be included in 'total expenses' as
well." The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC), however, ruled recently that
the statute "does not require or even vaguely suggest symmetry between the definitions of 'U.S.
expenses' and 'total expenses.'" In fact, the CAFC stated that the statutory definitions themselves
"undercut symmetrical treatment of 'total U.S. expenses' and 'total expenses.'" See U.S. Steel Group,
et al v. United States, 225 F.3d 1284, 1290 (CAFC 2000); see also, Thai Pineapple Canning Industry
Corp., Ltd. v. United States, 2000 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 17 (CIT September 10, 2000) (affirming the
Department's method of avoiding double-counting).
For the above reasons, we respectfully disagree with the CIT's instructions to include imputed
expenses in "total United States expenses" in the calculation of "total expenses."
FINAL RESULTS OF REDETERMINATION
In accordance with the remand order, we have recalculated the antidumping duty margins for
SNR as directed by the CIT. We made no changes to our margin calculations for SKF.
The recalculated weighted-average percentage dumping margins for the period May 1,
1995, through April 30, 1996, for BBs, CRBs, and SPBs are as follows:
Company BBs CRBs SPBs
SKF 10.80 (1) 42.79
SNR 8.59 10.14 (1)
(was 8.60) (was 10.14)
1) No shipments or sales subject to this review. The firm has no individual rate from any segment of this
proceeding.
______________________
Troy H. Cribb
Assistant Secretary
for Import Administration
______________________
Date
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snr roulements