JTEKT Corp. v. United States

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In order to determine an antidumping margin, Commerce must compare sales in the exporter’s home market with sales in the United States. 19 U.S.C. 1677(16). In its review of ball bearings, Commerce previously used the family model match methodology and considered sales of products in the exporter’s home market that had the same physical characteristics as the U.S. sale as part of the family of merchandise to average the prices of the family. Commerce later changed to the sum of the deviations method, which allows comparison of the U.S. sale to the sales of a single product in the exporter’s home market. The method uses the same characteristics, but weighs them differently. The Court of International Trade agreed with Commerce . The Federal Circuit vacated and remanded, holding that Commerce need not reconsider its model match methodology, but must explain why it continues to use zeroing in Administrative Reviews while discontinuing the practice in investigations. Zeroing is the practice whereby the values of positive dumping margins are used in calculating the overall margin, but negative dumping margins are included in the sum of margins as zeroes. View "JTEKT Corp. v. United States" on Justia Law