Sale quantity | Unit price | Number of sales | Total quantity sold at each price |
1-10 units | $100 | 10 sales of 5 units | 65 |
5 sales of 3 units | |||
11-25 units | 95 | 5 sales of 11 units | 55 |
Over 25 units | 90 | 1 sale of 30 units | 80 |
1 sale of 50 units |
The greatest number of units sold at a price is 80; therefore, the unit price in the greatest aggregate quantity is $90.
Sale quantity | Unit price |
40 units | $100 |
30 units | 90 |
15 units | 100 |
50 units | 95 |
25 units | 105 |
35 units | 90 |
5 units | 100 |
Total quantity sold | Unit price |
65 | $90 |
50 | 95 |
60 | 100 |
25 | 105 |
In this example, the greatest number of units sold at a particular price is 65; therefore, the unit price in the greatest aggregate quantity is $90.
Example. A foreign shipper sells merchandise to a related U.S. importer. The foreign shipper does not sell to any unrelated person. The transaction between the foreign shipper and the U.S. importer is determined to have been affected by the relationship. There is no identical or similar merchandise from the same country of production. The U.S. importer further processes the product and sells the finished product to an unrelated buyer in the U.S. within 180 days of the date of importation. No assists from the unrelated U.S. buyer are involved, and the type of processing involved can be accurately costed.
How should the merchandise be appraised?
The merchandise should be appraised under deductive value with allowances for profit and general expenses, freight and insurance, duties and taxes, and the cost of processing.
19 C.F.R. §152.105