Reading Health Sys. v. Bear Stearns & Co., 900 F.3d 87 (2018)

Aug. 7, 2018 · United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit · No. 16-4234
900 F.3d 87

READING HEALTH SYSTEM
v.
BEAR STEARNS & CO., n/k/a J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Appellant

No. 16-4234

United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.

Argued on October 10, 2017
Opinion filed August 7, 2018

Jonathan K. Youngwood, Esq. (ARGUED), Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP, 425 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10017, Counsel for Appellant

Mark A. Strauss, Esq. (ARGUED), Thomas W. Elrod, Esq., Peter S. Linden, Esq., Kirby McInerney LLP, 825 Third Avenue, 16th Floor, New York, NY 10022, Counsel for Appellee

Robert C. Port, Esq., Gaslowitz Frankel LLC, 303 Peachtree Street, N.E., Suite 4500, Atlanta, GA 30308, Counsel for Amicus Appellee Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association

Before: SHWARTZ and ROTH, Circuit Judges and* PAPPERT, District Judge

ROTH, Circuit Judge.

*90INTRODUCTION

In this case, we address an emerging trend in the brokerage industry. Ordinarily, broker-dealers, as members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA),1 are required by FINRA Rule 12200 to arbitrate all claims brought against them by a customer. Seeking to avoid this obligation to arbitrate, broker-dealers have begun inserting forum-selection clauses in their customer agreements, without mentioning the customer's right to arbitrate. This practice, which has been condoned by several of our sister circuits, deprives investors of the benefits associated with using FINRA's arbitral forum to resolve brokerage-related disputes.

This case concerns such a forum-selection clause. Over the course of several years, Bear Stearns & Co., now known as J.P. Morgan Securities LLC (hereinafter J.P. Morgan), a broker-dealer and FINRA member, executed several broker-dealer agreements with Reading Health System. The agreements were executed in connection with four separate offerings of auction rate securities (ARS), through which Reading issued more than $500 million in debt.2 Two of those contracts included forum-selection clauses providing that "all actions and proceedings arising out of" the agreements or underlying ARS transactions had to be filed in the District Court for the Southern District of New York.

After the ARS market collapsed, Reading filed a statement of claim with FINRA, alleging that J.P. Morgan engaged in unlawful conduct in connection with the ARS offerings and demanding that those claims be resolved through FINRA arbitration. J.P. Morgan refused to arbitrate, however, contending that Reading had waived its right to arbitrate by agreeing to the forum-selection clauses. To resolve this standoff, Reading filed a declaratory judgment action to compel FINRA arbitration in the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. In response, J.P. Morgan moved to transfer the action to New York, based on the forum-selection clauses in some (but not all) of the broker-dealer agreements. The District Court denied the motion to transfer the action and ordered J.P. Morgan to submit to FINRA arbitration. We will affirm both rulings.

BACKGROUND

I. Factual Background

Reading is a not-for-profit health system located in Berks County, Pennsylvania. Reading issued ARSs on four occasions in 2001, 2003, 2005, and 2007, offering a total of more than $500 million in debt to finance capital projects relating to the Reading Hospital and Medical Center Project. J.P. Morgan served as the underwriter and broker-dealer for each offering. The parties executed separate broker-dealer agreements in connection with each of the four ARS offerings.

Over time, the ARS offerings did not go as planned for Reading. Reading claims that J.P. Morgan and other broker-dealers artificially propped up the ARS market *91through undisclosed support bidding that created a false appearance of market demand for ARSs. Allegedly, when the broker-dealers stopped propping up the market in early 2008, the ARS market collapsed. As a result, Reading filed various state law claims against J.P. Morgan relating to the ARS offerings and demanded that those claims be arbitrated before FINRA.

This appeal does not require us to examine the propriety of J.P. Morgan's handling of the ARS offerings or to apportion fault for the collapse of the ARS market. Rather, we are asked to resolve only the parties' threshold disputes regarding the proper venue in which to adjudicate Reading's action to compel arbitration and the venue for Reading's substantive claims against J.P. Morgan.

To do so, we must examine the four broker-dealer agreements. Each of the agreements included a New York choice-of-law clause.3 Both the 2001 and 2002 broker-dealer agreements were executed by J.P. Morgan and Bankers Trust (as auction agent); Reading did not sign either agreement.4 Neither agreement includes a forum-selection clause. The 2005 broker-dealer agreement was executed by Reading Health, J.P. Morgan, and Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas.5 The 2007 agreement was executed by the same three parties, as well as the Berks County Municipal Authority.6 Both the 2005 and 2007 agreements contain a forum-selection clause that provides, in relevant part, as follows:

The parties agree that all actions and proceedings arising out of this Broker-Dealer Agreement or any of the transactions contemplated hereby shall be brought in the United States District Court in the County of New York and that, in connection with any such action or proceeding, submit to the jurisdiction of, and venue in, such court.7

J.P. Morgan asserts that the forum-selection clauses in these agreements required Reading to file both its declaratory action to compel arbitration and its substantive claims in the District Court for the Southern District of New York.

II. Procedural Background

In February 2014, Reading filed a statement of claim with FINRA, asserting claims against J.P. Morgan relating to the ARS offerings and demanding that J.P. Morgan arbitrate those claims in FINRA's arbitral forum.8 That demand was made pursuant to FINRA Rule 12200, which requires a FINRA member, such as J.P. Morgan, to arbitrate any dispute with a customer, such as Reading, at the customer's request. J.P. Morgan refused to arbitrate. In J.P. Morgan's view, the forum-selection clauses in the 2005 and 2007 broker-dealer agreements constituted a waiver *92of Reading's right to arbitrate under FINRA Rule 12200.9

In March 2015, Reading filed a single-count declaratory judgment action in the District Court for Eastern District of Pennsylvania.10 The following day, Reading moved to compel arbitration of the claims it had filed with FINRA, arguing that it was entitled to arbitrate those claims pursuant to FINRA Rule 12200. Invoking the forum-selection clauses in the 2005 and 2007 broker-dealer agreements, J.P. Morgan filed two motions: a motion to transfer the declaratory judgment action to the Southern District of New York and, in the event transfer was denied, a cross-motion to enjoin the FINRA arbitration.

In February 2016, the District Court issued a single order (i) denying J.P. Morgan's motion to transfer, (ii) granting Reading's motion to compel, and (iii) denying J.P. Morgan's cross-motion to enjoin.11 The court declined to transfer the declaratory judgment action to New York because, in its view, the forum-selection clauses did not designate the forum in which Reading should seek to compel arbitration. The court then required J.P. Morgan to submit to arbitration because it concluded that FINRA Rule 12200 granted Reading the right to arbitrate; this right was not overridden by the forum-selection clauses.

After we dismissed J.P. Morgan's initial appeal on jurisdictional grounds, the District Court granted J.P. Morgan's motion to certify the following question for interlocutory review:

[W]hether the United States Supreme Court decision in Atlantic Marine Construction Company, Inc. v. United States District Court for the Western District of Texas , [571 U.S. 49] 134 S.Ct. 568 [187 L.Ed.2d 487] (2013), requires a district court to enforce a forum selection clause by transferring a declaratory action seeking to compel arbitration, even if the district court determines that the forum selection clause does not cover the underlying arbitration that the plaintiff seeks to compel.12

We then granted J.P. Morgan's petition for permission to appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).

III. Regulatory Background

Reading bases its right to arbitrate its disputes with J.P. Morgan on FINRA's compulsory arbitration rule.

FINRA is an independent, self-regulatory organization (SRO) established pursuant to Section 15A of the Securities Exchange Act, which "created a system of supervised self-regulation in the securities industry."13 FINRA is authorized to "exercise comprehensive oversight over 'all securities firms that do business with the public,' "14 including J.P. Morgan and other *93broker-dealers that participated in the now-defunct ARS market. In its capacity as a securities regulator, FINRA has promulgated various rules governing the brokerage industry, many of which are designed to protect investors who conduct business with FINRA-regulated firms.15 The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which is statutorily authorized to oversee FINRA, must approve all such rules.16 A FINRA member agrees to comply with all of FINRA's rules and is thus bound to adhere to FINRA's Code and its relevant arbitration provisions.17

FINRA's authority includes regulatory oversight over securities arbitration.18 Indeed, "[t]he SEC has long viewed the option of securities arbitration for investors as an important component of its investor protection mandate" and, since its inception, "has urged the SROs it regulates to provide an alternative dispute resolution forum for customers."19 In furtherance of that mandate, FINRA now hosts the largest arbitration forum in the United States for resolving such disputes,20 which, according to FINRA and amicus , provides investors with a "fair, efficient and economical alternative to litigation."21 To ensure that customers can benefit from arbitration, FINRA has promulgated numerous arbitration-related rules,22 including FINRA Rule 12200, which requires FINRA members to submit customer disputes to FINRA arbitration whenever a customer demands arbitration.23 Given the compulsory nature of the *94Rule, courts have held that, even in the absence of a written arbitration agreement, Rule 12200 constitutes a binding arbitration agreement between a FINRA member and customer.24

A customer can initiate FINRA arbitration and invoke its arbitration rights under Rule 12200 by filing a "statement of claim" with the FINRA Director.25 Although Reading properly invoked its right to arbitrate by filing its statement of claim with FINRA, J.P. Morgan contends that it had no duty to arbitrate because Reading waived its rights under Rule 12200 by agreeing to the forum-selection clauses. It is against this backdrop that we consider the merits of the District Court's order.

DISCUSSION26

In this appeal, we must answer two questions: (i) whether J.P. Morgan, as a FINRA member, is obligated to resolve Reading's substantive claims through FINRA arbitration; and (ii) which court decides that question of arbitrability. To answer those questions we must resolve the inherent tension between Reading's right to arbitrate its claims pursuant to FINRA Rule 12200 and J.P. Morgan's purported contractual right to litigate those same claims pursuant to the forum-selection clauses in the broker-dealer agreements. Complicating this inquiry, the parties do not agree which of these questions must be resolved first; each side argues that the District Court lacked authority to resolve one of the two disputes at issue.

We agree with J.P. Morgan that the transfer dispute, as a threshold question of venue, was properly resolved before the arbitrability dispute. We thus begin by discussing whether the District Court was required to transfer Reading's declaratory judgment action to the District Court for the Southern District of New York.

I. The District Court Properly Resolved the Transfer Dispute Before the Arbitrability Dispute

When Reading filed its single-count, declaratory judgment action in the District Court, the only merits issue before the court was whether FINRA Rule 12200 required J.P. Morgan to submit to FINRA arbitration. However, once J.P. Morgan moved to transfer that action, the District Court was presented with a threshold issue regarding the propriety of the venue in which Reading filed its action to compel *95arbitration-namely, whether the declaratory judgment action should be transferred to New York in light of the forum-selection clauses. The parties spill much ink on which of these two issues should be resolved first. In J.P. Morgan's view, the transfer dispute must be resolved first and, since the District Court was required to transfer the action, it lacked authority to resolve the arbitrability dispute. By contrast, Reading argues that the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) required the District Court to enforce FINRA Rule 12200 by compelling arbitration and, therefore, the court was divested of its discretion to transfer. The District Court declined to transfer the case before turning to the question of arbitrability. We agree that threshold disputes over venue and jurisdiction should be resolved before merits disputes. Thus, we conclude that the District Court's sequence of decision-making was not only permissible, but also preferable.

In In re: Howmedica Osteonics Corp , we endorsed the view that district courts have "discretion to address convenience-based venue issues" in the first instance and that they "should suspend concerns about other threshold issues" while doing so.27 That view is supported by the principle that federal courts have flexibility to choose among alternate "grounds for denying audience to a case on the merits."28 For instance, the Supreme Court has upheld the authority of a district court to dismiss an action under the doctrine of forum non conveniens , without first determining whether the action should be dismissed on jurisdictional grounds.29 The Court granted such leeway to district courts because a forum non conveniens dismissal-much like the parties' dispute over transfer30 -is a "nonmerits issue" that "does not entail any assumption by the court of substantive law-declaring power."31 Venue disputes involve only a threshold determination "that the merits should [or should not] be adjudicated elsewhere."32 By contrast, resolving a dispute over arbitrability requires a district court to apply its law-declaring power regarding the parties' right to arbitrate. This determination may be frustrated if the threshold issue of venue is not decided first.

Moreover, resolving merits disputes at the outset, without first ensuring that venue is proper, would in certain cases nullify the very right afforded by the forum-section clause-i.e. , the right to resolve the merits in a contractually designated forum.33 In addition, ensuring venue is proper before turning to the merits promotes *96finality interests and judicial economy by ensuring the facial validity of any subsequent order compelling (or denying) arbitration.34 Such concerns are alleviated, however, by resolving threshold challenges to venue before secondary disputes over arbitrability.

The District Court, confronted with a plaintiff seeking to compel arbitration and a defendant moving to transfer the action to compel arbitration based on a forum-selection clause, properly addressed the transfer question before the question of arbitrability. We will turn then to the propriety of the denial of the motion to transfer.

II. The District Court Properly Declined to Transfer Reading's Action to Compel Arbitration

A. The Supreme Court's decision in Atlantic Marine does not require transfer.

J.P. Morgan moved to transfer Reading's declaratory judgment action, arguing that the Supreme Court's transfer framework announced in Atlantic Marine required the District Court to enforce the forum-selection clause by transferring the action to the Southern District of New York. The court disagreed that the forum-selection clause required transfer because, in its view, the clause does "not establish the judicial forum" in which Reading "must compel arbitration."35 In response to that ruling, J.P. Morgan asked us to determine, on interlocutory review, whether Atlantic Marine requires a district court to enforce a forum-selection clause by transferring a declaratory judgment action to compel arbitration, even if the district court concludes that the clause does not encompass the underlying arbitration.36 In other words, the question instructs us to assume that even if Reading's declaratory judgment action and statement of claim filed with FINRA fall outside the scope of the forum-selection clause, nevertheless Atlantic Marine required transfer.

Absent a forum-selection clause, a district court ordinarily assesses whether to transfer a case to another federal district by considering the factors set out in 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), including "various public-interest considerations" and the private interests of the parties to the litigation.37 In Atlantic Marine , however, the Supreme Court explained that the presence of a forum-selection clause alters the traditional analysis in several respects.38 Most significantly, a court considering a "motion to transfer based on a forum-selection clause should not consider arguments about the parties' private interests," since forum-selection provisions "represent[ ] the parties' agreement as to the most proper forum."39 As a result, when a court is confronted with a valid forum-selection *97clause that covers the dispute, it must consider only the public-interest factors and "deem the private-interest factors to weigh entirely in favor the preselected forum."40 For these reasons, the Atlantic Marine Court held that when a party invokes a forum-selection clause to transfer an action under § 1404(a), "a district court should transfer the case unless extraordinary circumstances unrelated to the convenience of the parties clearly disfavor transfer."41

Focusing on these words, J.P. Morgan contends that the District Court had to transfer this action because no extraordinary circumstances are present. But a central premise of J.P. Morgan's reliance on Atlantic Marine -and the requirement that district courts honor the parties' contractual choice of forum in all but extraordinary circumstances-is that Reading's action to compel arbitration falls within the scope of the forum-selection clauses. Nothing in Atlantic Marine disturbs the long-standing body of law clarifying that a court need not transfer an action based on a forum-selection clause if the clause is invalid (i.e. , an enforceability challenge) or if it does not cover the action or claims that the defendant is seeking to transfer (i.e. , a scope challenge).42 Rather, the transfer framework announced in Atlantic Marine presupposes the existence of an action that falls within the scope of a valid forum-selection clause.43 This conclusion answers the question we certified for interlocutory review:

[Does] ... Atlantic Marine ... require[ ] a district court to enforce a forum selection clause by transferring a declaratory action seeking to compel arbitration, even if the district court determines that the forum selection clause does not cover the underlying arbitration that the plaintiff seeks to compel .

The answer is, "No, it does not." If a party invokes a forum-selection clause to transfer an action-here, Reading's action to compel arbitration-but the district court concludes that the action does not fall within the scope of the clause, the traditional § 1404(a) framework applies, not the framework set forth in Atlantic Marine .

Accordingly, the District Court was required to apply Atlantic Marine and transfer the action to New York only if Reading's declaratory judgment action fell within the scope of the forum-selection clause.

*98B. Reading's action to compel arbitration does not fall within the scope of the forum-selection clause.

A scope-based challenge to the applicability of a forum-selection clause presents a quintessential question of contract interpretation.44 We have stressed that "whether or not a forum selection clause applies" to a particular dispute "depends on what the specific clause at issue says."45 The forum-selection clause in the 2005 and 2007 broker-dealer agreements provides that "all actions and proceedings arising out of this Broker-Dealer Agreement or any of the transactions contemplated hereby shall be brought in the United States District Court in the County of New York."46 J.P. Morgan maintains that the District Court was required to transfer the case because Reading's petition to compel arbitration is an "action ... arising out of" the broker-dealer agreements and the related ARS offerings. Reading counters that the action "arise[s] out of" FINRA Rule 12200-not the broker-dealer agreements or related transactions-and therefore the District Court appropriately denied the motion to transfer. We agree with Reading.

We begin with the meaning of the phrase "arising out of" in the forum-selection clauses. Because we have admonished that "[d]rawing analogy to other cases is useful only to the extent those other cases address contract language that is the same or substantially similar to that at issue,"47 we look to the decisions of our sister circuit courts of appeals that have construed the phrase "arising out of" in a forum-selection clause.48 In Coregis Insurance Co. v. American Health Foundation, Inc. , the Second Circuit Court of Appeals defined the phrase in accordance with its ordinary meaning: "To 'arise' out of means 'to originate from a specified source.' "49 In a subsequent decision, Phillips v. Audio Active Ltd. , the Second Circuit rejected the overbroad contention that the phrase arising out of "encompass[es] all claims that have some possible relationship with the contract, including claims that may only 'relate to,' be 'associated with,' or 'arise in connection with' the contract."50

*99Likewise, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has observed that "courts have resisted the siren call of" equating the term "arising out of" with the concept of but-for causation.51 We agree that "arising out of" in a forum-selection clause should be interpreted in accordance with the ordinary meaning of that phrase-i.e. , to originate from a specified source. Interpreting a forum-selection clause in accordance with its plain meaning comports with well-established principles of interpretation.52 And, as in Phillips , we see "no reason to presume the parties meant anything other than the dictionary definition of the term."53

The propriety of transfer thus turns on the following inquiry: Is Reading's declaratory judgment action to compel arbitration-not to be mistaken with the separate action it filed with FINRA-an action or proceeding that originates from the broker-dealer agreements or the related ARS offerings? In answering that question, we are again guided by Phillips . There, the court held that a plaintiff's federal copyright "claims d[id] not arise out of " a recording contract because those claims did not involve an assertion of the plaintiff's "rights or duties under that contract."54 Instead, the claims arose out of the Copyright Act. Likewise, here, Reading's action to compel FINRA arbitration does not "arise out of" the broker-dealer agreements because Reading's sole claim for declaratory relief does not involve an assertion of Reading's contractual "rights or duties."55 The only right Reading seeks to enforce in its complaint is its right to arbitrate its claims against J.P. Morgan. That right does not originate from the broker-dealer agreements, but rather from FINRA Rule 12200, which gives Reading the right to demand FINRA arbitration and imposes a corresponding duty on J.P. Morgan to arbitrate.56 Because the sole source for Reading's right to arbitrate is FINRA Rule 12200-without which Reading would not be entitled to compel arbitration, and J.P. Morgan would not have a duty to arbitrate-Reading's declaratory judgment action does not "arise out of" the broker-dealer agreements.

The broker-dealer agreements come into play only because J.P. Morgan has invoked the forum-selection clauses in *100those agreements as a defense to Reading's declaratory judgment action. "The answer to the question whether a 'defense' based on a contract that contains a forum selection clause implicates that clause depends on the language of the clause."57 Where, as here, the clause encompasses only disputes "arising out of" the contract, courts have rejected the argument that a contractual defense alone is sufficient to bring the dispute within the scope of the clause.58 We therefore decline J.P. Morgan's invitation to expand the scope of the forum-selection clause, under the guise of interpreting it, to encompass a contractual defense.59

Because Reading's declaratory judgment action to compel arbitration is not one "arising out of" the broker-dealer agreements, it does not fall within the scope of the forum-selection clause. We will therefore affirm the District Court's order denying J.P. Morgan's motion to transfer the action to the Southern District of New York.60

III. The District Court Properly Required J.P. Morgan to Submit to FINRA Arbitration Because the Forum-Selection Clause Did Not Waive Reading's Right to Arbitrate Under FINRA Rule 12200

Having concluded that the Eastern District of Pennsylvania was an appropriate venue in which to resolve the arbitrability dispute, we must decide whether to affirm the court's order requiring J.P. Morgan to submit to FINRA arbitration.61 This question requires us to reconcile the two competing rights at stake. On the one hand, FINRA Rule 12200 grants Reading the right to resolve its substantive claims against J.P. Morgan through FINRA arbitration.62 On the other hand, the forum-selection *101clause grants to J.P. Morgan the contractual right to litigate those claims. Unlike Reading's petition to compel arbitration, the statement of claim Reading filed with FINRA qualifies as an "action [or] proceeding ... arising out of" the broker-dealer agreements and related ARS transactions.63

Attempts to reconcile the tension between a broker-dealer's right to litigate pursuant to a forum-selection clause and a customer's corresponding right to arbitrate under FINRA Rule 12200 have divided our sister circuit courts. The Second and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals have held that a materially identical forum-selection clause requires the parties to litigate in federal court,64 while the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that Rule 12200 requires the parties to arbitrate, notwithstanding the presence of a forum-selection clause.65 We agree with the Fourth Circuit that the forum-selection clauses in the broker-dealer agreements are insufficient to waive Reading's right to arbitrate under FINRA Rule 12200.

On one side of the divide, both the Second Circuit (in Golden Empire ) and the Ninth Circuit (in City of Reno ) have held that "a forum selection clause requiring 'all actions and proceedings' to be brought in federal court supersedes an earlier agreement to arbitrate" embodied in FINRA Rule 12200.66 Treating Rule 12200 as a mere "default obligation" to arbitrate, the Ninth Circuit reasoned (over a dissent) that the customer "clearly and unambiguously disclaimed any right it might otherwise have had to FINRA arbitration" when it assented to the forum-selection clause.67 The Second Circuit likewise viewed the issue as "whether an arbitration agreement remains in force in light of a later-executed agreement,"68 concluding *102that the forum-selection clause in that agreement "supersede[d] the background FINRA arbitration rule."69 These courts accordingly concluded that the forum-selection clauses were controlling and the parties were required to litigate their dispute.

On the other side of the divide, the Fourth Circuit (in Carilion Clinic ) rejected the contention that the forum-selection clause operated to waive a customer's right to arbitrate under FINRA Rule 12200.70 The court began with the principle that an agreement waives the right to arbitrate only if it is "sufficiently specific to impute to the contracting parties the reasonable expectation that they are superseding, displacing, or waiving the arbitration obligation created by FINRA Rule 12200."71 Although the court acknowledged that "the obligation to arbitrate under FINRA Rule 12200 can be superseded and displaced by a more specific agreement between the parties," it still concluded that the forum-selection clause was not such an agreement, as it was entirely silent on the issue of arbitration.72 Thus, the court held that the customer had not waived its right to arbitrate and that the broker-dealer had to submit to FINRA arbitration.73

We agree with the Fourth Circuit that the question is one of waiver, and that the forum-selection clauses did not implicitly waive Reading's right to FINRA arbitration. This conclusion stems in part from our decision in Patten , where we had to determine whether a broker-dealer *103agreement containing a provision in which the parties consented to the jurisdiction of the New Jersey courts implicitly waived the customer's right to arbitration under NASD's compulsory arbitration rule (i.e. , the progenitor of Rule 12200).74 We rejected such an expansive view of waiver by relying on two well-established principles. First, we explained that a "party signing a waiver must know what rights it is waiving."75 Second, we invoked the strong federal policy, embodied in the FAA, favoring arbitration whenever doubts arise as to whether a dispute is arbitrable.76 Because the forum-selection clause in Patten was silent as to the issue of arbitration, raising doubts about whether the parties' had waived arbitration and whether the dispute was arbitrable, we held that it was insufficient to waive the customer's right to arbitrate under NASD rules.77

Although Patten involved a forum-selection clause with permissive language,78 its reasoning leads us to the same conclusion here: Reading did not waive its right to arbitrate by agreeing to the broker-dealer agreements. As in Patten , we begin by noting that any reference to arbitration is "[c]onspicuously absent from" the forum-selection clauses. Without a specific reference to arbitration, the forum-selection clause requiring parties to litigate actions "arising out of" the contract and related transactions lacks the specificity required to advise Reading that it was waiving its affirmative right to arbitrate under FINRA 12200.79 Indeed, the Fourth Circuit stressed in Carilion Clinic that "[n]o word even suggesting supersedence, waiver, or preclusion [of the right to arbitrate] exists" in the forum-selection clause.80 As we explained in Patten , had J.P. Morgan wanted Reading to waive its right to arbitrate, it should "have made a reference to arbitration" in either the waiver provision or forum-selection provisions of the broker-dealer agreements.81

Finally, we are reluctant to find an implied waiver here. Reading's right to arbitrate is not contractual in nature, but rather arises out of a binding, regulatory rule that has been adopted by FINRA and approved by the SEC. By condoning an implicit waiver of Reading's regulatory right to arbitrate, we would erode investors' ability to use an efficient and cost-effective means of resolving allegations of misconduct in the brokerage industry and thus undermine FINRA's ability to regulate, oversee, and remedy any such misconduct.82 In so holding, we split with some *104of our sister circuits, but begin the process of closing this contractual loophole to FINRA's compulsory arbitration rule.83

The District Court properly concluded that, under FINRA Rule 12200, J.P. Morgan is required to arbitrate Reading's claims regarding the ARS offerings.84

CONCLUSION

For these reasons, we will affirm the District Court's order, declining to transfer Reading's declaratory judgment action and compelling J.P. Morgan to submit to FINRA arbitration.