Chủ Nhật, 14 tháng 12, 2025

10 Practical Lessons Anti Dumping Law Firms in Vietnam Rely On When Cases Get Serious

  Anti-dumping investigations in Vietnam almost never happen in isolation. By the time a case is opened, the exporter is usually already working with a law firm in its home country on trade strategy, previous investigations elsewhere, and broader market risks.

When Vietnam initiates proceedings, one more piece is added to that possible arrangement. We have seen that, the client turns to their existing advisers in their home country and asks what this new investigation means in practice. Then, the foreign counsel turns to their affiliate anti dumping law firms in Vietnam, dealing with a different set of procedures, short deadlines, and data that is not always ready for scrutiny. 

10 Practical Lessons Anti Dumping Law Firms in Vietnam Rely On When Cases Get Serious
10 Practical Lessons Anti Dumping Law Firms in Vietnam Rely On When Cases Get Serious

In this article, we draw on our experience as anti dumping law firms in Vietnam to set out ten practical lessons we rely on when cases become serious, and suggest how cooperation can be structured so that your client’s defence is more coordinated, realistic, and effective.

Key Takeaways for Foreign Lawyers

  • Anti-dumping in Vietnam is a structured legal process with strict timelines.
  • Vietnamese counsel should focus on law, procedure, and reasoning; client and their accountants must own the numbers.
  • No firm can guarantee a zero or token duty, but a coordinated approach can avoid worst case adverse facts outcomes.
  • Clear role splitting between foreign counsel, anti dumping law firms in Vietnam, and the client’s finance team makes investigations more predictable and less painful.

Dumping is a Methodology

For many clients, being accused of dumping sounds like being accused of doing something improper or unfair in the market. Legally, the concept is much narrower and more technical than that.

In Vietnamese practice, as in other WTO members, dumping is about how prices are compared:

  • The export price to Vietnam
  • The “normal value” (usually the home-market price, or a constructed value based on cost and profit)

If the export price is lower on a comparable basis, and the method fits the rules, a dumping margin appears.

When anti dumping law firms in Vietnam look at a new case, we first rebuild that comparison clearly from investigation period, product scope, types of sales, and relevant adjustments. That shared understanding with foreign counsel is the starting point for any serious strategy.

Measures Follow Injury and Causation

Many exporters assume that if they can show their price is fair or commercially justified, they should be safe. Unfortunately, anti-dumping law does not work on subjective fairness.

Vietnamese authorities must consider three elements:

  1. Dumping, a margin calculated by defined methods.
  2. Material injury, real impact on domestic industry which are profits, capacity, market share, employment, etc.
  3. Causal link, which dumped imports must be a significant cause of that injury.

In practice, anti dumping law firms in Vietnam spend significant time on the injury story:

  • What is happening to Vietnamese producers?
  • Are there other major reasons for their difficulties?
  • Is the authority attributing too much to dumped imports?

When foreign and Vietnamese counsel align early on this bigger picture, we can jointly shape a more coherent narrative instead of arguing only about the margin percentage.

The Investigation As a Legal Procedure

From a distance, some clients see trade remedies that can be handled mainly through informal channels. Once a case is opened, it becomes a structured legal procedure.

A typical Vietnamese anti-dumping case will involve:

  • A formal notice of initiation
  • Registration of interested parties
  • Detailed questionnaires
  • On-site verification of data
  • Provisional and final determinations
  • Possible reviews and appeals

Deadlines are short and formalities matter. If submissions are incomplete or late, the authority may rely on best information available, which almost always results in higher duties.

One of the core roles of anti dumping law firms in Vietnam is to keep that procedure under control including registering parties, marking confidentiality correctly, meeting deadlines, and making sure the client’s position is properly on record.

Accept that Local Counsel Cannot Rewrite the Rules

Foreign lawyers sometimes ask, very reasonably, whether anti dumping law firms in Vietnam can:

  • Extend certain deadlines in practice
  • Narrow the product scope informally
  • Convince the authority to change its basic methodology

In reality, we are working inside a fixed legal and regulatory framework. We can:

  • Request reasonable extensions permitted by law
  • Argue that certain product types should be excluded based on objective criteria
  • Challenge the way the authority has applied its methods in a specific case

But we cannot promise to change the underlying rules or turn a complex, statutory process into a purely negotiated outcome. When this is explained clearly at the start, it sets expectations realistically for everyone, including the board and business teams.

Law Firms Should Not Act As the Client’s Accountants

This is one of the most practical points for cooperation.

In many cross-border cases, clients or foreign lawyers initially ask anti dumping law firms in Vietnam to calculate the dumping margin so they know their exposure. That is understandable, but it is not the right role for us.

The dumping margin sits on top of the client’s internal accounting:

  • Cost structures and overhead allocations
  • Domestic and export sales data
  • Discounts, rebates, commissions, and credit terms
  • Related-party transactions

Only the client’s finance team, or an independent accounting or consulting expert who understands that system, can safely build those numbers. If the law firm becomes the primary author of the margin calculation, it blurs roles and may reduce credibility at verification.

The better division of labour is:

  • Client and the accountants or financial consultants produce complete, reconciled data from the systems.
  • Anti dumping law firms in Vietnam would test whether the methods used align with the legal framework, check internal consistency, and explain to the authority why certain adjustments or approaches are justified.

Foreign counsel can support this separation by arranging, from the start, that someone on the client side is clearly responsible for the numbers, while the Vietnamese firm leads on law, process, and reasoning.

No One Can Guarantee a Low Duty

In anti-dumping, certainty is rare. Even with full cooperation, strong documentation, and a careful defence, the client may still face:

  • A positive dumping margin
  • Material injury findings
  • Duties that affect their business model

Professional anti dumping law firms in Vietnam will not guarantee outcomes. What we can do is:

  • Steer the case away from worst case adverse facts scenarios
  • Ensure that the authority is required to justify its reasoning
  • Preserve options for review and appeal

Foreign counsel can be very helpful by framing the case internally as risk management, not as a yes or no litigation bet. That framing makes it easier to invest in proper data work and documentation, even if the final duty is not zero.

Weak Data Cannot Be Saved by Strong Advocacy

This is usually the most difficult message to deliver. If a client’s data is fragmented, inconsistent, or simply missing, anti dumping law firms in Vietnam will do what we can:

  • Reconcile what exists
  • Explain anomalies
  • Propose reasonable, rule based ways to handle gaps

But we cannot turn poor records into a robust evidentiary base. If sales do not tie to ledgers, if related party pricing is undocumented, or if discounts exist only in emails and memory, the legal defence will always be constrained.

Foreign lawyers are often better placed than local counsel to push clients early on:

  • Cleaning up data extraction
  • Assigning serious internal resources
  • Accepting that anti-dumping is as much about accounting discipline as legal argument

When that push comes from both sides, results are almost always better.

Build a Joint Structure

The early phase of a case sets the tone. The most effective collaborations between foreign counsel and anti dumping law firms in Vietnam usually share some common features.

On the side of foreign counsel:

  • Explain the client’s group structure, decision making chain, and any parallel cases in other jurisdictions.
  • Clarify who has authority to approve positions that may affect other countries.
  • Help the client understand that Vietnam’s case cannot be treated in isolation if other markets are watching.

On the Vietnamese side:

  • Map the initiation notice: products, period, alleged dumping and injury.
  • Highlight immediate deadlines and registration steps.
  • Break down questionnaires into practical data tasks for finance, sales, logistics.

Instead of handling each request reactively, the goal in those first weeks is to build a case team and a shared calendar. Once that is in place, everything else is easier.

During Questionnaires and Verification

As the case progresses into questionnaires and verification visits, workload and pressure increase. This is where a clear cooperation model pays off.

A typical role split that works well:

1. Client and accountants or financial consultants

  • Prepare transaction level data in the formats requested by the authority.
  • Reconcile those figures to audited financial statements and ledgers.
  • Document how discounts, rebates, and related-party terms actually work in practice.

2. Anti dumping law firms in Vietnam

  • Review whether the data set is complete from a legal point of view.
  • Check for obvious internal contradictions or unexplained gaps.
  • Draft the written explanations and narratives that accompany the data.
  • Prepare the client for verification: what officials will look for, how documents should be presented, and how to answer questions without over- or under-stating.

3. Foreign counsel

  • Keep the client’s global exposure and parallel investigations in view.
  • Ensure that positions taken in Vietnam do not contradict arguments filed elsewhere.
  • Translate technical developments into language that the board and business teams can act on.

When everyone stays in their lane but shares information openly, the client experiences a coordinated team.

After Provisional Findings

Once provisional duties are announced, many internal discussions narrow to one question on what will the final margin be.

Realistically, neither foreign counsel nor anti dumping law firms in Vietnam can give a precise answer at that point. What we can do together is work through scenarios:

  • If the authority accepts certain methodology changes, what duty range becomes plausible?
  • If it maintains its current approach, can the business model absorb the duties, or does production or pricing need to change?
  • Is it worth preparing for review or appeal, and what evidence would be needed?

This is where foreign and Vietnamese firms can add the most strategic value together including linking legal options to commercial decisions on markets, contracts, and supply chains. The conversation becomes like what each scenario mean for us, and how do we prepare rather than what the exact number today is.

Questions Foreign Lawyers Often Ask Anti Dumping Law Firms in Vietnam

Q1: Can the Vietnamese firm act as both legal counsel and economic expert?

Vietnamese firms can handle the legal and procedural framework, and they can discuss methodology at a high level. For credibility and accuracy, it is usually better if detailed calculations are produced by the client and their accounting or economic experts. The Vietnamese firm then tests those calculations against the legal rules.

Q2: When is the right time to involve a Vietnamese trade remedy firm?

Ideally before any case starts, especially if your client’s sector is already facing investigations elsewhere. In practice, many instructions arrive only after initiation. Even then, engaging anti dumping law firms in Vietnam early in the process, within the first few weeks makes a real difference to organisation, deadlines, and the quality of submissions.

Q3: Does it still make sense to invest in a defence if the sector is sensitive?

Often yes. Even in sensitive sectors, a structured, cooperative defence can reduce duties, avoid extreme adverse facts margins, and preserve room for reviews or appeals. Sometimes the result is not a complete win, but a managed outcome that keeps the Vietnamese market viable.

Q4: How can we make future cooperation smoother?

From experience, future work with anti dumping law firms in Vietnam is much easier when:

  • The client has invested in cleaner, more accessible data.
  • Internal roles, legal, finance, logistics are defined in advance for trade remedy cases.
  • Foreign counsel and Vietnamese counsel have a clear channel for exchanging drafts and aligning positions across countries.

An early, honest discussion helps a lot.

Conclusion

For foreign lawyers, Vietnam is often one piece of a larger trade remedy cooperation. For anti dumping law firms in Vietnam, the client’s case is grounded in local law and procedure but connected to global strategy.

The most successful outcomes happen when our relationship is a partnership, which the foreign counsel bring global context and client history. The local firms bring in local rules, practice, and procedural discipline. The client provides data and commercial reality.

If we are clear about what each side can and cannot do, especially about the limits of law firms on calculating margins and guaranteeing outcomes, then when cases get serious, we are all pulling in the same direction for the client.

About ANT Lawyers, a Law Firm in Vietnam

We help clients overcome cultural barriers and achieve their strategic and financial outcomes, while ensuring the best interest rate protection, risk mitigation and regulatory compliance. ANT lawyers has lawyers in Ho Chi Minh city, Hanoi, and Danang, and will help customers in doing business in Vietnam.

Source: https://antlawyers.vn/update/10-practical-lessons-anti-dumping-law-firms-in-vietnam.html

Thứ Ba, 9 tháng 12, 2025

India Imposes 5 Years Anti-Dumping Duties on Hot-Rolled Steel From Vietnam

  

Introduction

India has announced the imposition of anti-dumping duties for a period of five years on certain hot-rolled steel products originating in or exported from Vietnam.

On November 13th, 2025, the Ministry of Finance of India confirmed that the measure aims to protect domestic steel producers from injury caused by unfairly priced imports.

India Imposes 5 Years Anti-Dumping Duties on Hot-Rolled Steel From Vietnam
India Imposes 5 Years Anti-Dumping Duties on Hot-Rolled Steel From Vietnam

The decision follows a detailed investigation conducted by India’s Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR), which concluded that Vietnamese origin steel was being dumped into the Indian market at prices that harmed the local industry.

Final Findings by DGTR Trigger the Measure

The duty announcement is based on DGTR’s final findings issued on August 13th, 2025.

DGTR determined that imports of alloy and non-alloy hot-rolled steel plates from Vietnam were being sold in India at low prices, significantly undercutting domestic producers.

This conclusion provided the legal basis for the Ministry of Finance to impose definitive anti-dumping duties for a five-year period.

Duty Rates and Scope of Application

Under the final decision:

  • Hoa Phat Dung Quat Steel Joint Stock Company is the only Vietnamese manufacturer exempted from the anti-dumping duty.
  • All other Vietnamese producers and exporters will face a fixed anti-dumping duty of USD 121.55 per metric ton on covered products.

According to Reuters, the same duty rate also applies to goods shipped from Vietnam but manufactured in third countries, targeting transshipment practices used to bypass the measure.

Duration and Legal Effect

The anti-dumping duty will remain in force for five years from the date of publication, unless earlier revoked, amended, or replaced following a review or policy decision.

The payable duty will be collected in Indian rupees, calculated according to the exchange rate applicable on the date the import invoice is presented.

Implications for Vietnamese Exporters and Indian Importers

The decision poses several business implications:

  • Most Vietnamese exporters will face significantly higher costs when supplying hot-rolled steel to India.
  • Indian importers may experience increased procurement costs and supply chain adjustments.
  • Re-exporters or third-country processors routing goods through Vietnam may also be subjected to the duty, depending on origin verification.

This measure highlights India’s growing vigilance against both dumping and potential circumvention patterns in the steel sector.

Trade Compliance Message

India’s imposition of a fixed anti-dumping duty underscores its commitment to shielding domestic industries from price caused by imported steel.

The exemption for only one Vietnamese producer reflects DGTR’s detailed assessment of cooperation levels and pricing practices.

As India continues to intensify its scrutiny of steel imports, exporters operating in Vietnam will need to maintain pricing transparency, and compliance to avoid future liabilities.

About ANT Lawyers, a Law Firm in Vietnam

We help clients overcome cultural barriers and achieve their strategic and financial outcomes, while ensuring the best interest rate protection, risk mitigation and regulatory compliance. ANT lawyers has lawyers in Ho Chi Minh city, Hanoi, and Danang, and will help customers in doing business in Vietnam.

Source: https://antlawyers.vn/update/india-imposes-5-years-anti-dumping-duties-on-hot-rolled-steel-from-vietnam.html

Thứ Năm, 4 tháng 12, 2025

5 Key Insights into the Vietnam Intellectual Property Law Amendments: What Businesses Must Prepare For

 

Introduction

Vietnam Intellectual Property Law amendments have long been expected.

Why?

For sometime, we have seen clients’ feedback on the delay of the procedures i.e. registration of IP rightsrefusal to possible IP violations. Many times, we come across clients feeling hopeless seeking solutions to enforcement of violations of IP rights.

Now, it seems Vietnam is moving into a critical reform period, and one of the most consequential developments is the upcoming Vietnam Intellectual Property Law amendments. This revision cycle is broader than the amendments of 2009, 2019, and 2022. It reflects Vietnam’s economic transformation and the State’s intention to strengthen innovation capacity, align with international commitments, and respond to rapid changes in the digital economy.

The process is already in motion. On October 27th, 2025, the Government formally submitted the Draft Law amending and supplementing a number of articles of the Intellectual Property Law to the National Assembly. The National Assembly then held a plenary debate on November 24th, 2025, focusing on valuation of intellectual property, digital content protection, enforcement mechanisms, and compliance with FTAs such as CPTPP, EVFTA, and RCEP.

Based on legislative procedure timelines and the level of consensus expressed at the November debate, the amendments are realistically positioned for adoption in late 2026, with expected effect from 2027 once implementing decrees and circulars are issued.

In here, we discuss the overview grounded in official records, legal logic, and policy direction for businesses planning ahead.

5 Key Insights into the Vietnam Intellectual Property Law Amendments
5 Key Insights into the Vietnam Intellectual Property Law Amendments

IP Must Shift from Protection to Asset Value

Vietnam’s Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) made it clear in the dossier submitted with the draft that IP must evolve from a passive certificate into an active economic asset.

This aligns with the Government’s strategic orientation to develop a market for science and technology, where the Vietnam Intellectual Property Law amendments will have a key role.

  • IP can be valued,
  • used as collateral,
  • contributed as capital, and
  • commercialised across industries.

The draft law calls for:

  • Legal recognition of IP valuation,
  • A national IP transaction and valuation database,
  • More transparent licensing and transfer mechanisms,
  • Clear principles for using IP as security in financial transactions.

This is a direct response to the challenges raised by innovators, investors, and enterprises who face difficulties converting IP assets into financial value under the existing framework.

The Digital Economy Requires Modern, Technology-Aligned IP Rules

During November 24th, 2025 National Assembly debate, delegates raised practical concerns regarding digital content, online distribution, and AI-generated materials. Multiple lawmakers noted that the existing law does not adequately address:

  • Redistribution of news content on digital platforms
  • Platform liability for hosting copyrighted content
  • Automated reproduction through algorithms
  • AI-generated content that may infringe rights
  • Cross-border streaming and digital licensing models

The draft introduces provisions that strengthen digital copyright enforcement and clarify obligations for platforms, intermediaries, and organisations deploying AI-driven content systems.

These changes aim to protect creators, media agencies, and technology companies in a rapidly evolving digital environment.

Enforcement Must Be More Predictable and Harmonised

Reports submitted to the National Assembly’s Committee for Legal Affairs and Committee for Science, Technology and Environment highlighted inconsistencies across administrative, civil, and criminal enforcement channels.

Key issues included:

  • Overlapping sanctions
  • Limited deterrence for large-scale infringement
  • Lack of coordination between market authorities, police, and courts
  • Insufficient tools for border enforcement

The amendments seek to:

  • Clarify enforcement pathways
  • Harmonise administrative and civil remedies
  • Strengthen border measures
  • Enhance coordination between enforcement agencies

These reforms respond directly to long-standing concerns raised by domestic enterprises and foreign investors about the predictability of IP enforcement in Vietnam.

Vietnam Must Align with Its International Commitments

Vietnam’s participation in FTAs such as CPTPP, EVFTA, and RCEP obligates the country to elevate its IP regime to international standards.

The Government’s explanatory report accompanying the draft law highlighted several areas requiring alignment:

  • Border control against infringing imports
  • Digital-era copyright protections
  • Limitation of liability for online intermediaries
  • Fair and transparent licensing practices
  • Protection of confidential information and trade secrets

Strengthening these rules helps Vietnam meet treaty obligations while enhancing investor confidence and supporting cross-border licensing, franchising, OEM/ODM manufacturing, and technology transfer.

Registration, Procedures, and Compliance Will Become Simpler and Clearer

Feedback from consultations conducted by the Government in mid-2025 consistently emphasised the need for procedural reforms.

Key areas of simplification proposed in the draft include:

  • Shorter IP registration timelines
  • More transparent opposition and invalidation procedures
  • Easier renewal and recordal processes
  • Greater accessibility for SMEs and foreign investors

These improvements are expected to reduce compliance burdens and support enterprises seeking faster and more reliable IP protection.

Step-by-Step Guide for Businesses Preparing for the Vietnam Intellectual Property Law Amendments

A structured preparation plan allows businesses to align internal systems early and minimise risk when the Vietnam Intellectual Property Law amendments come into force.

Step 1: Conduct an internal IP audit

Identify registered and unregistered assets: trademarkssoftware, databases, confidential information, and creative works.

Step 2: Assess which assets can be monetised or valued

Prioritise assets with licensing potential, market reach, or financial relevance.

Step 3: Strengthen internal IP governance

Clarify employee IP ownership, contractor obligations, and digital content review processes.

Step 4: Update all IP-related contracts

Adjust licensing, outsourcing, manufacturing, franchising, technology transfer, and platform agreements to reflect new obligations.

Step 5: Implement digital and AI compliance mechanisms

Ensure safe use of copyrighted content, establish AI content screening, and protect data and trade secrets.

Step 6: Track the legislative process through 2026

Monitor draft revisions, NA discussions, implementing regulations, and official guidance.

Conclusion

The Vietnam Intellectual Property Law amendments reflect a deliberate shift in Vietnam’s economic strategy: building an innovation-driven, digitally resilient, internationally aligned IP regime. With the draft already submitted to the National Assembly on October 27th, 2025, debated publicly on November 24th, 2025, and positioned for adoption in late 2026, businesses have a clear timeframe to prepare.

For enterprises, this reform is not merely a legal adjustment. It is an opportunity to strengthen valuation, commercialisation, compliance, and digital governance frameworks, ultimately turning intellectual property into a meaningful and strategic asset.

About ANT Lawyers, a Law Firm in Vietnam

We help clients overcome cultural barriers and achieve their strategic and financial outcomes, while ensuring the best interest rate protection, risk mitigation and regulatory compliance. ANT lawyers has lawyers in Ho Chi Minh city, Hanoi, and Danang, and will help customers in doing business in Vietnam.

Source: https://antlawyers.vn/ip/vietnam-intellectual-property-law-amendments.html

Thứ Hai, 1 tháng 12, 2025

6 Key Updates on Eurasian Economic Union Anti-Dumping Investigation on Tires from Vietnam

  The Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) has officially announced the initiation of an anti-dumping investigation concerning truck tires originating from Thailand and Vietnam. The decision follows a determination by the Domestic Market Protection Department of the EAEU Economic Commission that the sharp increase in tire imports could cause significant harm to the Union’s domestic manufacturing industry.

6 Key Updates on Eurasian Economic Union Anti-Dumping Investigation on Tires from Vietnam
Eurasian Economic Union Anti-Dumping Investigation on Tires from Vietnam

EAEU Launches Investigation After Sharp Import Growth

The investigation was initiated on November 7th, 2025, based on complaints filed by domestic companies including Belshina, Omskshina, Cordiant, and Nizhnekamsk. According to the case file, the tires under investigation are truck tires used on various vehicles with multiple axles, including freight cars, buses, electric vehicles, dump trucks, trailers, and semi-trailers. These are rubber tires and tubes with rim diameters ranging from 17.5 to 24.5 inches, classified under HS codes 4011.20.100.0 and 4011.20.900.0.

According to the EAEU investigation notice, between 2022 and 2024, the import volume from Thailand and Vietnam into the EAEU increased by 2.6 times, and the market share of this product group in domestic consumption rose 2.4 times, creating significant pressure on domestic production.

Allegations of Dumping and Harm to EAEU Industry

The EAEU investigation authority alleges that imports from the two countries were sold at prices lower than the average prices of EAEU – produced goods (except in 2023). Production, economic, and financial indicators of the domestic EAEU industry declined during both the 2022 – 2024 period and April 2024 – March 2025 period, specifically:

  • Production decreased by 6% and 14%
  • Capacity utilization decreased by 5% and 6%
  • Inventory increased by 15% and 19%
  • Sales profit decreased by 59% and 78%
  • Manufacturing profit margins decreased by 68% and 80%
  • Profit margins on sales within the Union decreased by 62% and 76%

The notice also points out that truck tires from Thailand and Vietnam are primarily produced for export. The total production capacity of these two countries far exceeds the consumption demand of the EAEU market. Furthermore, Vietnamese tire manufacturers plan to launch new production lines with a capacity of around 1.4 million units, significantly expanding export potential.

The notice further mentions that recent investigations and trade defense measures by the United States, Brazil, South Africa, and Egypt, as well as the U.S. Section 232 investigation under the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 on imported tires (including products from Thailand and Vietnam), may redirect export flows toward the Eurasian market.

The provisional dumping margins alleged by the EAEU are:

  • 24.17% for Thailand
  • 19.59% for Vietnam

Investigation Procedure and Obligations of Stakeholders

The investigation follows Article 49 of the EAEU Treaty and Protocol Appendix 8 on the application of trade defense measures. Key timelines include:

  • Registration of interested parties: within 25 days from the initiation date
  • Requests for public hearings: within 45 days from the initiation date
  • Submission of comments and information: within 60 days from the initiation date
  • Sampling procedure: applied when the number of companies is large; companies must provide production and export data for the period July 1st, 2024 – June 30th, 2025

Companies must submit both confidential and non-confidential versions in Russian, following EAEU templates.

Consequences of Non-Cooperation

Under the Protocol, companies that:

  • Fail to submit information
  • Submit it late
  • Or provide inaccurate data

may be subject to the “adverse facts available” (AFA) mechanism, resulting in the highest possible anti-dumping duty applied to non-cooperating entities.

Impact on Vietnamese Exporters

The investigation could lead to significant anti-dumping duties if Vietnamese companies do not fully cooperate, which would:

  • Increase export costs to the EAEU market
  • Affect the supply chains of regional importers
  • Risk the highest possible duties if deemed to have provided unreliable data

Recommended Response from Authorities

1. For industry associations:

  • The Trade Defense Department recommends quickly informing relevant companies about the alleged products so they can respond and manage the case, while urging companies to participate to avoid being considered non-cooperative.
  • Maintain direct communication with the The Trade Remedies Authority of Vietnam (TRAV) for timely support.
  • Identify the largest exporting companies during the investigation period (July 1st, 2024 – June 30th, 2025) to anticipate which companies may be selected as mandatory respondents.

2. For involved manufacturing and exporting companies:

Follow the procedural steps:

  • Register as an interested party according to instructions.
  • Provide full information for the sampling procedure within 25 days from the investigation start date, by December 2nd, 2025, at the latest. Failure to respond on time will be treated as non-cooperation and result in a high adverse duty rate.
  • Fully respond to the investigation questionnaire if selected as a mandatory respondent, following instructions.
  • Submit requests for public hearings within 45 days of the initiation date.
  • Submit comments on the case (if any) within 60 days of the initiation date.

Closely monitor the investigation developments and proactively study and understand EAEU anti-dumping regulations, procedures, and requirements.

Fully cooperate with the Russian Federal Investigation Authority throughout the process. Any lack or partial cooperation may lead the EAEU authority to apply the highest anti-dumping duties based on available information.

Regularly communicate with the The Trade Remedies Authority of Vietnam (TRAV) to receive timely support.

About ANT Lawyers, a Law Firm in Vietnam

We help clients overcome cultural barriers and achieve their strategic and financial outcomes, while ensuring the best interest rate protection, risk mitigation and regulatory compliance. ANT lawyers has lawyers in Ho Chi Minh city, Hanoi, and Danang, and will help customers in doing business in Vietnam.

Source: https://antlawyers.vn/update/eaeu-anti-dumping-investigation-on-tires-from-vietnam.html