65 FR 60406 October 11, 2000 A-351-605 AR 5/98-4/99 Public Document MEMORANDUM TO: Troy H. Cribb Acting Assistant Secretary for Import Administration FROM: Richard W. Moreland Deputy Assistant Secretary, Group 1 Office of AD/CVD Enforcement SUBJECT: Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Antidumping Duty Administrative Review on Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice from Brazil - May 1, 1998, through April 30, 1999 Summary We have analyzed the comments of the interested parties in the 1998-1999 administrative review of the antidumping duty order covering frozen concentrated orange juice from Brazil. As a result of our analysis of the comments received from interested parties, we have made changes in the margin calculations as discussed in the "Margin Calculations" section of this memorandum. We also recommend that you approve the positions we have developed in the "Discussion of the Issues" section of this memorandum. Below is the complete list of the issues in this administrative review for which we received comments from parties: 1. Collapsing of Affiliated Parties 2. Calculation of Financing Expenses 3. Treatment of Citrovita's Foreign Exchange Losses 4. Treatment of Cambuhy's Foreign Exchange Losses 5. Calculation of the Cost of Oranges Produced by an Affiliated Party 6. Calculation of Selling, General, and Administrative Expenses and Financing Expenses for the Collapsed Entity Background On June 6, 2000, the Department of Commerce (the Department) published the preliminary results of the administrative review of the antidumping duty order on frozen concentrated orange juice (FCOJ) from Brazil. See Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice from Brazil; Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 65 FR 35892 (June 6, 2000) (Preliminary Results). The product covered by this order is frozen concentrated orange juice. The period of review (POR) is May 1, 1998, through April 30, 1999. We invited parties to comment on our preliminary results of review. Based on our analysis of the comments received, we have changed the results from those presented in the preliminary results. Margin Calculations We calculated constructed export price and normal value using the same methodology stated in the preliminary results, except as follows: • We recalculated Citrovita's and Cambuhy's manufacturing costs for purposes of calculating the selling, general, and administrative (SG&A) and financing expense rates in order to state the denominator used in the calculation of the SG&A and financing expense rates on the same basis as the cost of manufacturing, to which the rates were applied. We applied these revised rates to the cost of manufacturing used in the preliminary results. See Comment 6. Discussion of the Issues Comment 1: Collapsing of Affiliated Parties During the POR, an affiliate of Citrovita purchased another Brazilian producer of FCOJ and that producer's affiliated trading company. (1) These companies are named Cambuhy MC Industrial Ltda. (Cambuhy) and Cambuhy Citrus Comercial e Exportadora S.A. (Cambuhy Exportadora), respectively. (2) For purposes of the preliminary results, we found that Citrovita was affiliated with Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora because: 1) beginning in September 1998, certain members of the family that controls Citrovita, as well as the commercial director of Citrovita, were placed on the boards of directors of Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora; and 2) in December 1998, ownership of these two companies was transferred to Citrovita's affiliate. Because we found that Citrovita and the two acquired companies were affiliated, we conducted an analysis to determine whether it was appropriate to collapse them within the meaning of 19 CFR 351.401(f). Based on this analysis, we found that: 1) these companies had production facilities for similar or identical products which would not require substantial retooling in order to restructure manufacturing priorities; and 2) there was a significant potential for the manipulation of prices or production between these companies. Consequently, we treated them as a single entity and calculated a single cash deposit rate for them for purposes of the preliminary results. Specifically, we combined Citrovita's POR sales and cost data with the data reported for Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora beginning with the time period that affiliation began (i.e., September 1998). Citrovita agrees that the Department correctly found that Citrovita was affiliated with both Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora. However, Citrovita argues that the potential for the manipulation of prices or production between these parties arose only in December, after the end of the 1998 crushing season. Citrovita notes that a tolling arrangement existed between Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora prior to the acquisition of these companies by the Votorantim Group. Although Citrovita concedes that this tolling arrangement continued after the acquisition, Citrovita asserts that it did so only because the acquisition occurred too late in the crushing season to change anything. Thus, Citrovita argues that this fact supports the contention that Citrovita was not able to manipulate prices or production during the POR. Finally, Citrovita notes that neither of the acquired companies made sales to the United States during the POR. Consequently, Citrovita implies that the Department should not collapse Citrovita and these parties for purposes of the final results. (3) Citrovita argues that, if the Department continues to collapse the companies in question, it should recalculate the production costs for these companies. Specifically, Citrovita maintains that the Department should base SG&A and financing costs on the experience of Citrovita and Citrovita's parent company, respectively, rather than on an average of Citrovita's and Cambuhy Exportadora's SG&A and financing costs. According to Citrovita, Cambuhy Exportadora's SG&A and financing costs are distortively high because of certain actions taken prior to the time when Citrovita (and Citrovita's affiliates) gained control. (4) Citrovita argues that inclusion of these expenses has inflated the normal value calculation far beyond reasonable limits. The petitioners assert that the Department was within its statutory authority to collapse Citrovita, Cambuhy, and Cambuhy Exportadora. According to the petitioners, evidence on the record indicates that all of the criteria outlined in 19 CFR 351.401(f) have been met, and thus there is a significant potential for the manipulation of price or production. The petitioners note that, in determining whether the potential for manipulation exists, the Department does not focus exclusively on the actions taken by a respondent during a given review period but rather on what actions that company may take in the future. As support for this contention, the petitioners citeNotice of Final Results of Antidumping Administrative Reviews of Certain Fresh Cut Flowers from Colombia, 61 FR 42833, 42854 (Aug. 19, 1996) and Salmon from Chile, 62 FR at 31421. The petitioners assert that, in those cases, the Department's analysis was directed toward whether the companies in question had the potential of manipulating production in order to avoid or artificially minimize dumping duties. The petitioners contend that Citrovita's reliance on Salmon from Chile is misplaced. According to the petitioners, in that case, unlike here, the Department found that the degree of affiliation was not significant. Moreover, the petitioners note that in that case, unlike here, the companies ended their relationship during the period of investigation. Thus, the petitioners maintain that the Department correctly found in Salmon from Chile that there was no potential for the future manipulation of prices or production. In contrast, the petitioners argue that the Department should continue to find that Citrovita and its affiliates have the ability to manipulate prices or production and should continue to collapse Citrovita and these parties for purposes of the final results. Regarding Citrovita's argument that the Department should not base SG&A and financing expenses on Cambuhy Exportadora's experience, the petitioners disagree. According to the petitioners, the effect of collapsing is to treat the companies in question as a single entity. The petitioners contend that, contrary to Citrovita's assertions, the true costs of the consolidated entity would be distorted for purposes of the antidumping analysis if these costs were not combined. Moreover, the petitioners assert that, because it is not possible to segregate Cambuhy Exportadora's data into pre- and post- acquisition cost periods, the Department must use these costs in their entirety. Finally, the petitioners maintain that the Department correctly found that Cambuhy Exportadora was a producer of subject merchandise. The petitioners point out that Citrovita did not challenge the Department's factual findings regarding the nature of the relationship between Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora. Moreover, the petitioners assert that Citrovita supplied no evidence that there was a plan to change the tolling situation. Thus, the petitioners assert that it is appropriate to include Cambuhy Exportadora's SG&A and financing costs in the calculation of normal value, consistent with the Department's policy on tolling relationships. Department's Position: The Department's practice of collapsing affiliated producers is codified in 19 CFR 351.401(f), which states: [T]he Secretary will treat two or more affiliated producers as a single entity where those producers have production facilities for similar or identical products that would not require substantial retooling of either facility in order to restructure manufacturing priorities and the Secretary concludes that there is a significant potential for the manipulation of price or production. . . . In identifying a significant potential for the manipulation of price or production, the factors the Secretary may consider include: (i) The level of common ownership; (ii) The extent to which managerial employees or board members of one firm sit on the board of directors of an affiliated firm; and (iii)Whether operations are intertwined, such as through the sharing of sales information, involvement in production and pricing decisions, the sharing of facilities or employees, or significant transactions between the affiliated producers. In this case, all parties agree that Citrovita was affiliated with Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora during the POR. Moreover, Citrovita does not dispute the facts that: 1) each of the companies has production facilities for similar or identical products that would not require substantial retooling of either facility in order to restructure manufacturing priorities; 2) all of the companies were under the common ownership and control of the same entities; and 3) the commercial director of Citrovita sat on the boards of directors of Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora. (5) Rather, Citrovita argues that, because the crushing season was almost over at the time that Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora were acquired, Citrovita was unable to manipulate Cambuhy Exportadora's production process during the POR. As a threshold matter, we disagree with Citrovita that the company did not have the ability to manipulate Cambuhy's and Cambuhy Exportadora's operations after their purchase by the Votorantim Group. Indeed, Citrovita practically admitted as much in its supplemental questionnaire response. See page 16 of Citrovita's November 22, 1999, submission. While we are unable to repeat Citrovita's statements here due to a claim for business proprietary treatment, we note that these statements confirm that Citrovita had the ability to affect Cambuhy's and Cambuhy Exportadora's pricing and production decisions during the POR. For further discussion, see the Collapsing Memo at page 11. Moreover, we find unpersuasive Citrovita's argument that the continued tolling arrangement between Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora served as evidence that Citrovita was unable to manipulate the production process of these companies. Although we know that this relationship remained in place until the end of the 1998 crushing year, there is no evidence on the record to demonstrate that it changed during the subsequent season. In contrast, there is evidence on the record showing that Cambuhy's production activities changed. Specifically, we note that, after the Votorantim Group acquired these two companies, Cambuhy began functioning as a producer in its own right rather than acting merely as a toller for other parties. Moreover, Cambuhy purchased the oranges used in its own production from Citrovita's orchards. From these facts, we conclude that Citrovita not only could influence Cambuhy's production process during the POR, but it actually did influence it. Regarding pricing, we agree that neither Cambuhy nor Cambuhy Exportadora had sales to the United States during or after September 1998. However, the presence or absence of U.S. sales is not determinative when deciding whether it is appropriate to collapse affiliated producers. Rather, the relevant factor is whether the potential for manipulation of pricing exists between these affiliated companies. Because Citrovita's commercial director occupied a position of importance on both Cambuhy's and Cambuhy Exportadora's boards of directors, we find that the potential for manipulation of pricing existed during the POR. This finding is confirmed by Citrovita's proprietary statements in its November 22 submission, as noted above. The purpose of treating affiliated producers as a single entity is straight forward. As we stated inCertain Fresh Cut Flowers From Colombia; Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews, 61 FR 42833, 42853 (Aug. 19, 1996): Because the Department calculates margins on a company-by-company basis, it must ensure that it reviews the entire producer or reseller, not merely part of it. The Department reviews the entire entity due to its concerns regarding price and cost manipulation. Because of this concern, the Department normally examines the question of whether reviewed companies 'constitute separate manufacturers or exporters for purposes of the dumping law.' Final Determination of Sales at Less than Fair Value; Certain Granite Products from Spain, 53 FR 24335, 24337 (June 28, 1988). Where there is evidence indicating a significant potential for the manipulation of price and production, the Department will 'collapse' related companies; that is, the Department will treat the companies as one entity for purposes of calculating the dumping margin. See Nihon Cement Co., Ltd. v. United States, 17 CIT 400 (1993). Because we find that the criteria set forth in 19 CFR 351.401(f) have been met, we have continued to treat Citrovita, Cambuhy, and Cambuhy Exportadora as a single entity for purposes of the final results. Accordingly, we have combined these companies' home market sales, as well as their production costs, in the calculation of normal value. Finally, we find that it is appropriate to continue to include Cambuhy Exportadora's SG&A and financing expenses in our calculations for purposes of the final results. We agree with the petitioners that combining the costs of the collapsed affiliates is the only way to represent the true cost of producing FCOJ for the single entity. Thus, we find that excluding the SG&A and financing expenses of Cambuhy Exportadora from the combined expenses of the collapsed entity would not reasonably reflect the cost of producing FCOJ. Moreover, we find that there is no evidence on the record to support Citrovita's claim that Cambuhy Exportadora's SG&A and financing expenses are unreasonable. Therefore, we have continued to calculate SG&A and financing expenses on an annual basis for the collapsed entity as a ratio of total company-wide expenses to the cost of goods sold. (6) Comment 2: Calculation of Financing Expenses For purposes of the preliminary results, we calculated financing expenses using the amounts shown on the financial statements of Citrovita, Cambuhy, and Cambuhy Exportadora. According to Citrovita, this methodology is incorrect because the Department's established practice is to base financing expenses on data taken from the financial statements of a respondent's parent company. Thus, Citrovita argues that the Department should recalculate financing expenses using the financial statements of Citrovita's parent company, Nitro Quimica. Citrovita maintains that using these financial statements also has the benefit of avoiding the distortions in the margin calculations caused by the inclusion of the exchange rate losses noted in Comment 3 andComment 4, below. The petitioners do not comment on this issue, except to note that there is no basis for not combining the financing expenses of Citrovita, Cambuhy, and Cambuhy Exportadora. SeeComment 1 above. Department's Position: The Department's longstanding practice with regard to financing expenses is to base net financing expenses on the full-year net interest expense and cost of sales from the audited fiscal year financial statements at the highest level of consolidation which correspond most closely to the POR. See Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon- Quality Steel Plate Products from France 64 FR 73143, 73152 (Dec. 29, 1999). This practice has been upheld by the Court of International Trade. See Gulf States Tube Div. Of Quanex Corp. v. United States, Slip Op. 97-124, Consol. Court No. 95-09-01125 (CIT August 29, 1997). However, despite the fact that there are numerous affiliated companies that meet the requirements for consolidation with the respondents, in this case we are unable to follow the Department's general practice of using the financing expenses drawn from consolidated financial statements at the highest level of consolidation because no such consolidated financial statements exist. In the absence of consolidated financial statements, we are unable to base the interest expense calculation on the financial results of the consolidated corporate entity to which the respondents are a part. Consistent with our approach in Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Dynamic Random Access Memory Semiconductors of One Megabit and Above From the Republic of Korea, 58 FR 15467, 15475 (Mar. 23, 1993), where consolidated audited financial statements do not exist and are not easily prepared, we deem it appropriate to base the interest expense calculation on the audited financial statements of the respondent (i.e., the unconsolidated financial statements for the three entities collapsed for this proceeding). We disagree with the respondent that to simply use the financial results for one of the numerous companies which meet the requirements for consolidation (not even one of the producing companies) in the interest expense computation rectifies the lack of consolidated data. Given the number of companies that, to date, have been identified as comprising the entire conglomerate, using merely one company's financing information would not yield a more accurate result. Thus, consistent with the approach articulated in DRAMs from Korea and due to facts in this case, we have based financing expenses on the unconsolidated financial statements for the three entities collapsed for this proceeding. Comment 3: Treatment of Citrovita's Foreign Exchange Losses During the POR, Citrovita opened a line of credit and guaranteed this line of credit with future export shipments. For purposes of the preliminary results, we included the foreign exchange losses associated with this loan in Citrovita's financing expenses. Citrovita argues that this treatment is inappropriate because the losses in question related to the conversion of dollar-denominated export revenues, not costs, to Brazilian reais for purposes of the financial reports prepared by Citrovita. According to Citrovita, in all cases the exchange rate loss was attributable to the local currency difference between the dollar-denominated export earnings at the time the right to collect those earnings is assigned to the bank and the time that the bank actually collects them. Citrovita states that, for most Brazilian companies, the exchange rate gain or loss associated with the export financing program at issue would be relatively minor compared to total sales value. Citrovita claims that this holds true for all companies except those, like itself, which export virtually their entire production. Citrovita asserts that, for those companies, the exchange rate loss can be huge. Thus, Citrovita contends that, if the loss is treated as anything other than a nominal bookkeeping entry, it can be fundamentally distorting to the dumping analysis. Citrovita acknowledges that the Department addressed this issue in Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Cold-Rolled Flat- Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products From Brazil, 65 FR 5554, 5581 (Feb. 4, 2000) (Cold-Rolled Steel from Brazil). However, Citrovita contends that the Department mischaracterized the nature of the foreign exchange gains and losses in that case. According to Citrovita, because the bank collects the dollar amounts received from the purchaser, any exchange rate loss is attributable to the revenue side of the transaction. Thus, Citrovita argues that the loss has nothing to do with the amount of local currency that will have to be paid to retire the foreign currency-denominated loan balance. (7) The petitioners contend that the Department properly accounted for the exchange rates losses at issue. According to the petitioners, the Department correctly found in the preliminary results that: 1) the line of credit was simply a loan like any other loan taken out by Citrovita; and 2) the fact that this loan was guaranteed by exports was incidental to the treatment of any foreign exchange losses related to it. The petitioners assert that, because Citrovita used the loan to finance its production, the Department should continue to include the exchange losses in question in the company's cost of production (COP). Department's Position: We disagree with Citrovita that the foreign exchange losses in question are related to the company's export revenues. During the POR, the Brazilian real experienced a significant depreciation against the U.S. dollar. Although Citrovita claims that this depreciation resulted in substantial exchange losses associated with the company's accounts receivables, we note that this statement cannot be true from an accounting perspective. Rather, because the value that Citrovita (and the bank) actually collected from the customer was worth more in terms of Brazilian reais than the Brazilian reais value recorded in the accounting system at the time of the sale, Citrovita should have recognized an exchange gain on its sales transactions. In contrast, we believe that the exchange rate loss was generated by the repayment of the loan and the payment of interest in U.S. dollars (i.e., interest expense was accrued at one exchange rate and actually paid at another). We normally include a portion of the exchange gain or loss incurred on notes (or loans) payable in our calculation of interest expenses. This portion is equivalent to the total exchange gain or loss amortized over the annual maturities of the debt. We do not include any exchange gain or loss related to accounts receivable because it does not relate in any way to production activities. We note that our treatment of Citrovita's foreign exchange losses is consistent with the Department's practice to include foreign exchange losses incurred on advance financing for export sales in the financial expense ratio calculation. In this case, we find that the foreign exchange losses incurred on the export financing in question are related to the financing activities of the company. As noted by the petitioners, the funds received from using accounts receivable as collateral may be used in any capacity the company decides, such as in producing subject merchandise. Accordingly, we find that the foreign exchange losses incurred on these types of agreements are related to the company's debt. Therefore, we have included the losses in the calculation of the financial expense ratio, consistent with our practice. See Cold-Rolled Steel from Brazil, 65 FR at 5581. Comment 4: Treatment of Cambuhy's Foreign Exchange Losses During the POR, Cambuhy held two long-term loans which were denominated in U.S. dollars. For purposes of the preliminary results, we amortized the total fiscal-year exchange rate loss associated with these loans over the remaining maturities of the loans. Citrovita argues that this treatment is inappropriate because it creates a financial cost for future payments which is entirely speculative. According to Citrovita, if the Brazilian real appreciates in the future, Cambuhy will book exchange rate gains which reflect the lower value of the outstanding loan balance in Brazilian reais, thus reversing the costs that the Department included in the calculation of COP. Citrovita contends that the Department should disregard these losses in their entirety. Citrovita asserts that, because Cambuhy sells the majority of its production in export markets, the principal amounts of these loans will be repaid from dollar-denominated export earnings. Consequently, Citrovita maintains that exchange rate shifts have no real impact on Cambuhy's actual financing costs. The petitioners maintain that Citrovita's arguments are irrelevant because the Department's long-standing policy is to include in the calculation of COP those exchange rate losses which are related to the actual cost of acquiring and maintaining debt. As support for this contention, the petitioners cite Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Static Random Access Semiconductors From the Republic of Korea, 63 FR 8934, 8940 (Feb. 23, 1998) (SRAMs from Korea) and Cold-Rolled Steel from Brazil, 65 FR at 5581. Moreover, the petitioners state that, even though the principal on the loans at issue will be paid from dollar-denominated export earnings, this does not change the fact that the funds that Cambuhy received were in reais and that, as the devaluation took place, Cambuhy had to spend more money than expected in its production costs. Thus, the petitioners maintain that the exchange rate losses had an impact on Cambuhy's financing costs and should be included in the COP. Department's Position: We agree with the petitioners and have included the amortized portion of foreign exchange losses on long-term debt in the COP as part of interest expense. The transaction gains and losses at issue are related to the cost of acquiring and maintaining debt. Because these costs are related to production, they are properly included in the calculation of financing expense as a part of COP. In previous cases, we have found that exchange losses represent an increase in the actual amount of cash needed by respondents to retire their foreign- currency-denominated loan balances. See,e.g., SRAMs from Korea, 63 FR at 8940; and Salmon from Chile, 63 FR at 31430. The fact that Cambuhy exported a significant portion of its production during the POR is irrelevant to the issue of determining whether Cambuhy recognized exchange losses in its normal books and records. Cambuhy recorded the loan in reais in its normal books and records and adjusted the reais-denominated loan balance and interest and principal payments to reflect current exchange rates with the U.S. dollar since the loans were denominated in U.S. dollars. U.S. dollars when collected from export customers will be converted to reais and used as principal repayments in the books and records of the company to reduce the loan payable to the lender. We verified the foreign exchange losses for Cambuhy. See the Cambuhy cost verification report at page 23. To reasonably reflect the cost of producing and selling the subject merchandise, it is necessary that the respondents' cost reflect the added financial burden represented by the additional cash needed to retire foreign-currency-denominated loans. Therefore, for the final results, we amortized deferred foreign exchange translation losses over the maturities of the debt and included the amortized portion in net interest expense, in accordance with our practice. SeeSalmon from Chile, 63 FR at 31430; SRAMs from Korea, 63 FR at 8940; and Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Steel Concrete Reinforcing Bars From Turkey, 62 FR 9737, 9743, (March 4, 1997). Regarding Cambuhy's concern that the Department would not accord similar treatment to foreign exchange gains, we find that this concern is misplaced because it is our practice to include both gains and losses related to foreign- currency-denominated loans for purposes of our calculations. Comment 5: Calculation of the Cost of Oranges Produced by an Affiliated Party Both Citrovita and Cambuhy purchased oranges from an affiliated party during the POR. For purposes of the preliminary results, we valued these oranges using the affiliate's cost of production, in accordance with 19 CFR 351.407(b), because this cost was higher than both the transfer price between the affiliates and the market price between unaffiliated parties. Citrovita asserts that it does not disagree with the decision to use the affiliate's costs; however, it contends that the Department should recalculate them. Specifically, Citrovita contends that the Department should exclude all selling expenses incurred by the affiliate from its calculation of the affiliate's COP because these expenses were not incurred to sell oranges to Citrovita. Rather, Citrovita asserts that they were incurred to sell various other products to unaffiliated parties. According to Citrovita, sales to unaffiliated purchasers entail significant selling expenses, while sales to Citrovita do not. The petitioners contend that the Department correctly calculated the affiliate's COP. The petitioners argue that the affiliate's costs, including selling expenses as if sold to an unaffiliated party, is the most accurate value of the oranges in question. According to the petitioners, acceptance of Citrovita's argument would undermine the Department's general methodology with respect to inputs provided by an affiliated supplier because it would allow respondents to gain an advantage by using such inputs. Specifically, the petitioners argue that respondents would never include selling expenses, a traditional component of cost, in their calculations in situations where inclusion of these expenses would result in costs which were higher than the prices paid to affiliated or unaffiliated parties. Department's Position: Although Citrovita has asserted that the selling expenses in question were incurred solely in conjunction with sales to unaffiliated parties, there is no evidence on the record to support such a finding. Indeed, we note that Citrovita raised this issue for the first time in its case brief, well after the deadline for the submission and verification of new factual information. Because there is no basis on the record for accepting Citrovita's claim, we have continued to include selling expenses in the affiliate's cost of producing the oranges sold to Citrovita for purposes of the final results. Comment 6: Calculation of Selling, General, and Administrative Expenses and Financing Expenses for the Collapsed Entity For purposes of the preliminary results, we calculated G&A and financing expenses using the expenses of Citrovita, Cambuhy and Cambuhy Exportadora. We expressed these costs as a percentage of each company's cost of sales shown on its financial statements and then multiplied the resulting percentage by the cost of manufacturing (COM) computed for each party. We then computed a weighted-average COP using these figures. Citrovita argues that this methodology overstates the companies' actual G&A and financing expenses because the COM calculated by the Department includes certain costs which are not reflected in the companies' financial statements. Specifically, Citrovita notes that COM includes the cost of oranges produced by an affiliated party (see Comment 5, above), whereas Citrovita's financial statements reflect the transfer price from the affiliate and Cambuhy's financial statements reflect either the transfer price or no cost for these oranges. The petitioners did not comment on this issue. Department's Position: We agree with Citrovita in part and have recalculated Citrovita's and Cambuhy's manufacturing costs for purposes of calculating the G&A and financing expense rates in order to state the denominators of these calculations on the same basis as the COMs, to which the rates were applied. We applied these revised rates to the COMs used in the preliminary results. Specifically, we have adjusted the denominators of these calculations to use the cost of the oranges in question rather than the transfer price from the affiliated party. Additionally, for Citrovita, we added to the denominator of the G&A and financing expense calculation freight costs related to transporting the oranges in question because these costs had been mis-classified as selling expenses. Regarding Cambuhy Exportadora, we note that this company did not report its cost of acquiring the oranges used in its production. As a result, we have no reasonable method of including Cambuhy Exportadora's actual costs in its COM, other than the amount included as facts available (i.e., the affiliated party's COP for fruit). Consequently, we have continued to calculate G&A and financing expenses for Cambuhy Exportadora using the same methodology as in the preliminary results. Recommendation Based on our analysis of the comments received, we recommend adopting all of the above positions. If these recommendations are accepted, we will publish the final results of review and the final weighted-average dumping margin for the reviewed firm in the Federal Register. Agree____ Disagree___ Troy H. Cribb Acting Assistant Secretary for Import Administration Endnotes: __________________________________________________________________________ 1. Specifically, these acquisitions were made by a sister company to Citrovita's parent company, both of whom were in the same corporate group of companies known as the Votorantim Group. 2. Based on analysis of the data on the record of this proceeding, we also found that Cambuhy Exportadora functioned as a producer of FCOJ during the POR. See the May 30, 2000, memorandum from the team to Richard W. Moreland, entitled "Treatment of Data Reported by Affiliated Parties in the Antidumping Duty Administrative Review on Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice from Brazil" (the Collapsing Memo). 3. Citrovita asserts that the Department has never collapsed parties which became affiliated late in a review period for purposes of the normal value calculation. As support for this contention, Citrovita cites Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Fresh Atlantic Salmon from Chile, 63 FR 31411, 31421 (June 9, 1998) (Salmon from Chile), where the Department declined to collapse affiliated parties that terminated the affiliation during the period of investigation. 4. See the July 14, 2000 case brief at page 3 for a proprietary discussion of these expenses. 5. Each of these factors is discussed in detail in the Collapsing Memo. 6. This ratio is based on figures from the company's audited fiscal year financial statements that most closely correspond to the POR. 7. Citrovita notes that the Department stated this rationale in Salmon from Chile, 63 FR at 31430.