US–China Trade Daily Highlights | 2026-04-10
1) Executive Summary
Today’s edition covers 12 official U.S. government notices related to trade, enforcement, and information collection. The main agencies are the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), the Department of Commerce (DOC), and the Department of Justice (DOJ). Key instruments include antidumping (AD) and countervailing duty (CVD) reviews, Section 337 investigations, and procedural notices under the Paperwork Reduction Act and the Foreign Agents Registration Act. One ITC action involves China explicitly under Section 337, and Commerce published several AD/CVD determinations worldwide—two directly involving China.
2) Updates by Authority
INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION (ITC)
Glass Substrates for Liquid Crystal Displays — Section 337 (Public Interest Solicitation)
The ITC issued a notice seeking public comments on the public interest implications of a potential exclusion order in Investigation No. 337-TA-1441, covering certain glass substrates for LCDs and products incorporating them. The ALJ issued an initial determination of violation on April 7, 2026, involving respondents including Caihong Display Devices, TCL China Star Optoelectronics, and affiliates. Public submissions are due May 8, 2026.
- Authority: International Trade Commission
- Policy Type: ITC_337
- Event Type: Trade Remedy
- China Indicator: Explicit
- Key date: April 7, 2026 (initial determination)
- Link: Source
Pickleball Paddles — Section 337 (Complaint and Public Interest Notice)
ITC announced receipt of a new complaint in Docket 3898, “Certain Pickleball Paddles,” alleging Section 337 violations through import and sale of infringing paddles. The Commission seeks public comments on the potential public interest impact of requested exclusion and cease-and-desist orders.
- Authority: International Trade Commission
- Policy Type: ITC_337
- Event Type: Trade Remedy
- Key date: April 7, 2026 (notice issuance)
- Link: Source
USMCA Automotive Rules of Origin — Procedural Notice (Information Collection)
The ITC announced plans to submit a Motor Vehicle Producer Questionnaire to OMB under Investigation No. 332‑608, supporting its 2027 report on the economic impact of USMCA automotive rules of origin. Comments are due within 60 days of publication.
- Authority: International Trade Commission
- Policy Type: Procedural Notice
- Event Type: Policy Notice
- Link: Source
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (INTERNATIONAL TRADE ADMINISTRATION)
Monosodium Glutamate (MSG) from China and Indonesia — Final Sunset Reviews (AD)
Commerce confirmed that eliminating the AD orders on MSG from China and Indonesia would likely lead to renewed dumping at margins up to 40.41% (China) and 6.19% (Indonesia).
- Policy Type: AD_CVD
- Event Type: Sunset Review (Final)
- China Indicator: Explicit
- Authority: DOC, Enforcement & Compliance
- Link: Source
Tetrahydrofurfuryl Alcohol (THFA) from China — Fourth Sunset Review (AD)
Commerce found that revocation of the AD order on THFA from China would likely cause continuation of dumping, with margins up to 136.86%.
- Policy Type: AD_CVD
- Event Type: Sunset Review (Final)
- China Indicator: Explicit
- Authority: DOC, Enforcement & Compliance
- Link: Source
Hot-Rolled Steel Flat Products from Japan — Preliminary Results of AD Review (2023–2024)
Commerce preliminarily determined that Nippon Steel sold below normal value (13.07%) while Tokyo Steel had a 0% margin. The review covers multiple respondents; comments are due per standard AD procedures.
- Link: Source
Hot-Rolled Steel from Korea — Preliminary CVD Review (2023)
DOC preliminarily found countervailable subsidies for Hyundai Steel (1.28%) and POSCO (3.71%); 13 firms’ reviews were rescinded.
- Link: Source
Prestressed Concrete Steel Wire Strand — Multiple Countries (AD/CVD and Sunset Reviews)
- From Brazil, India, Mexico, Korea, Thailand: revocation would continue dumping at margins up to 118.75% (Brazil).
- From Japan: revocation of older “finding” would likely produce renewed dumping up to 13.30%.
- Separately, for India (CVD Order), subsidies would continue at rates up to 62.92%.
- Links: Brazil et al. | Japan | India CVD
Commodity Matchbooks from India — AD/CVD Sunset Reviews
Revocation of AD and CVD orders on Indian commodity matchbooks would lead to renewed dumping (66.07% AD) and subsidization (9.88% CVD).
- Links: AD Review | CVD Review
Carbon and Alloy Steel Threaded Rod from India — Final AD Review
Commerce found no dumping by Mangal Steel Enterprises Ltd. for the 2023–2024 review period; margins are zero.
- Link: Source
Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from India — Partial AD Review Rescission (2024–2025)
DOC rescinded the administrative review for dozens of companies lacking reviewable entries.
- Link: Source
Large Diameter Welded Pipe from Canada — Rescission of AD Review (2024–2025)
The review was rescinded due to lack of shipments.
- Link: Source
Common Alloy Aluminum Sheet from Türkiye — Final AD Review
Commerce finalized dumping margins between 4.01% and 14.19% for Turkish producers, maintaining duties.
- Link: Source
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE – POLICY / EXPORT PROMOTION
American AI Exports Program — Call for Consortia Proposals
The International Trade Administration announced a call for proposals under the new American AI Exports Program, seeking industry-led “pre-set” consortia to promote full-stack U.S. AI technology exports, per Executive Order 14320. Consortia must meet U.S. content and control standards; designation may offer priority government advocacy and export licensing support. Proposals are due June 30, 2026.
- Link: Source
Duty-Free Entry for Scientific Instruments — PRA Information Collection Notice
Commerce seeks public comment on renewing Form ITA‑338P for requests under the Florence Agreement, enabling duty-free entry of qualifying scientific equipment.
- Link: Source
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE – NATIONAL SECURITY DIVISION (FARA UNIT)
Three separate notices invite public comment on revised Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) information collections:
- Form NSD‑1 (Registration Statement)
- Form NSD‑5 (Amendment to Registration Statement)
- Form NSD‑6 (Short Form Statement)
Each proposal seeks 60-day public comments under the Paperwork Reduction Act.
3) Key Takeaways (Factual)
- China remains a focus in trade enforcement: Commerce reaffirmed continuation of AD orders on MSG and THFA from China, and the ITC advanced a Section 337 case involving Chinese LCD component makers.
- Global AD/CVD maintenance: Commerce concluded numerous sunset reviews across Asia and Latin America, confirming persistent dumping risk in sectors like steel strand and matchbooks.
- Trade policy innovation: The Commerce Department launched the American AI Exports Program to structure U.S. AI export promotion under new executive authority.
- Regulatory housekeeping: Multiple notices addressed ongoing information-collection renewals across Commerce and Justice agencies, ensuring compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act.
- No major unwinding of trade barriers observed—most reviews sustained existing duties or found ongoing enforcement justified.
4) Full Source Links (Index)
- – Glass Substrates (ITC 337)
- – Pickleball Paddles (ITC 337)
- – USMCA Auto ROO Survey Notice
- – MSG from China & Indonesia (AD Sunset)
- – THFA from China (AD Sunset)
- – Hot-Rolled Steel Japan (AD Review)
- – Hot-Rolled Steel Korea (CVD Review)
- – Prestressed Steel (AD Sunset Multiple)
- – Prestressed Steel Japan (AD Finding Sunset)
- – Prestressed Steel India (CVD Sunset)
- – Commodity Matchbooks India (AD)
- – Commodity Matchbooks India (CVD)
- – Carbon/Alloy Threaded Rod India (AD Review)
- – Frozen Shrimp India (AD Rescission)
- – Large Diameter Pipe Canada (AD Rescission)
- – Common Alloy Aluminum Sheet Türkiye (AD Review)
- – AI Exports Program Notice
- – Duty-Free Scientific Instruments Notice
- – FARA Form NSD‑1 Notice
- – FARA Form NSD‑5 Notice
- – FARA Form NSD‑6 Notice
5) Legal Disclaimer
This article includes content collected and summarized from publicly available U.S. government materials, including the Federal Register (federalregister.gov). The content presented is not an official government publication and does not represent the views of any U.S. government authority.
This article is provided for informational and research purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, compliance advice, or recommendations for any specific entity or transaction. Readers should refer to the original official documents and consult qualified professionals before making decisions based on this information.


