OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal from a magistrate’s order compelling the parties to arbitrate their securities dispute presents us with an important question of appellate jurisdiction.
I.
Facts
A brief account of the underlying events suffices for purposes of this appeal. Dorothy Zosky, an investor complaining of certain unsuccessful investments, filed this suit against Boenning and Scattergood, a regional securities brokerage firm which is a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, and Daniel Boyer III, a registered broker employed by Boenning, alleging violations of the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and common law negligence. The defendants’ answer asserted, inter alia, that plaintiff’s claim was subject to an arbitration agreement and that plaintiff must be compelled to proceed in that manner. 1 Zo- *555 sky refused defendants’ request that the dispute be submitted to arbitration. As defendants’ counsel subsequently explained, she did not file a motion to enforce arbitration at that time in view of the status of the law in the Third Circuit on the subject of the arbitrability of investor securities fraud complaints. 2
Following a period of discovery,
3
the parties agreed that the matter could be referred to a magistrate for trial. Thereafter, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Shearson/American Express, Inc. v. McMahon,
— U.S. —,
Zosky appeals, contending that the law of the case doctrine renders improper the magistrate’s reversal of his original order after defendants had taken and subsequently withdrawn their appeal; that defendants waived their right to arbitrate; that the arbitration clause in the Customer Agreement did not constitute a binding contract; that the arbitration agreement did not cover the dispute with Boyer; and that one of the relevant trades was not transacted through the customer account and was, therefore, not subject to the arbitration agreement.
II.
Discussion
We cannot reach the merits of this appeal unless we are satisfied of this court’s jurisdiction, an issue we are obliged to consider
sua sponte.
The parties in their briefs asserted our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a), citing our opinion in
Gavlik Constr. Co. v. H.F. Campbell Co.,
Before this matter was argued, however, the Supreme Court handed down its opinion in
Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp.,
— U.S. —,
A.
Arbitration Orders and Appealability: Prior Treatment
The Federal Arbitration Act (the Act), 9 U.S.C. §§ 3-4, which was enacted in 1925 to eliminate the judicial rule that arbitration agreements were unenforceable in courts of admiralty and equity,
see The Anaconda v. American Sugar Refining Co.,
As has been recently explained, a section 4 motion to compel arbitration has often been filed in an ongoing proceeding,
see Hartford Financial Systems, Inc. v. Florida Software Services, Inc., 712
F.2d 724, 728 (1st Cir.1983), thereby blurring the distinction established by the Arbitration Act between orders under section 3 staying ongoing proceedings and orders in independent proceedings to compel arbitration under section 4. However, it makes no practical difference whether the court enters an order in an ongoing suit compelling arbitration or merely stays its own proceedings. In either event, arbitration is the
sine qua non
before proceeding. Indeed, the Supreme Court long ago suggested that “power to grant a stay is enough without the power to order that the arbitration proceed, for, if a stay be granted, the plaintiff can never get relief unless he proceeds to arbitration.”
The Anaconda,
Various bases were given for appellate jurisdiction over orders which in effect required arbitration. Stays of proceedings pending arbitration were early held to be interlocutory and hence appealable, if at all, under
Enelow-Ettleson
as injunctions.
See, e.g., Baltimore Contractors, Inc. v. Bodinger,
While
Enelow-Ettleson
endured, the difference was functionally unimportant; no matter whether the order was one staying proceedings or compelling arbitration in an ongoing proceeding or one compelling arbitration in a separate proceeding filed for that purpose, a way was likely to be found for its appeal. Some courts based their analysis of appealability on the nature of the underlying proceedings
(i.e.,
whether the suit was directed only at securing arbitration),
see, e.g., Rogers,
The law of appellate jurisdiction over arbitration orders acquired what one judge described as “Byzantine peculiarities.”
New England Power Co. v. Asiatic Petroleum Corp.,
B.
Section 1291
We turn first to the paramount source of our jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The leading case in this circuit analyzing arbitration orders under section 1291 is
Rogers v. Schering Corp.
where Judge Maris, writing for the in banc court, set forth the rule that an order requiring arbitration is appealable as final under 28 U.S. C. § 1291 “where it is not merely a step in the judicial enforcement of a claim nor auxiliary to the main proceeding but is the full relief sought.... Such cases are to be distinguished from those in which an order for arbitration is made in the course of a continuing suit for other relief.”
The facts of
Rogers
are illustrative of arbitration orders entered in independent proceedings. Schering, a German-owned company owning valuable patents which
*558
had come under United States control following the outbreak of World War II, had agreed with the United States Attorney-General to license the patents to qualified appellants on a non-exclusive basis at a reasonable royalty fixed by negotiation or arbitration. Schering declined to license Hexagon Laboratories on the ground it was not qualified. On Hexagon’s application, the district court found Hexagon qualified and ordered Schering to arbitrate the amount of the royalty rate.
Brownell v. Schering Corp.,
In finding appellate jurisdiction, this court recognized that the district court’s order “merely opened the way for the continued operation of the prior order directing the parties to negotiate the royalty rate to be inserted in Schering’s patent license to Hexagon and if necessary to arbitrate it.”
The Rogers court drew a distinction based on the procedure from which the arbitration order arose. It explained:
the underlying rationale ... is that an order directing arbitration is interlocutory and, therefore, not appealable if it is made in a lawsuit, such as a suit for damages, in which in the normal course of judicial procedure there will be a later final order or judgment from which an appeal can be taken by a person aggrieved by the prior order to arbitrate. If, however, the order to arbitrate will not in the normal course of procedure be followed by another judicial order which will be required to carry the arbitration award into effect, the order to arbitrate must be regarded as final if the right to review it on appeal is to be given.
Rogers’
reliance on the procedural posture of the underlying litigation was supported by the cases which it cited.
Goodall-Sanford,
its principal source of support, held that orders entered in proceedings to compel arbitration pursuant to section 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 were final and appealable under section 1291.
This case, in which the defendant in a suit for statutory and common law damages has moved to compel arbitration, would appear to fall clearly within the rule of
Rogers
that orders arising out of a law suit “such as a suit for damages” are interlocutory and not appealable as final orders. Arbitration is not the full relief sought by the plaintiff; indeed, the plaintiff opposes arbitration. The magistrate retains jurisdiction and may be expected in the ordinary course of proceedings to issue the further orders necessary to effectuate the results of arbitration. When a final order is entered in this case, the issue of whether or not the magistrate properly ordered arbitration will be ripe for review.
See, e.g., Commonwealth Insurance Co.,
Applying Rogers to the facts of this case, however, places us in conflict with Gavlik, which Zosky relies on to sustain our jurisdiction. In Gavlik, two subcontractors sued the general contractor for payment for work done. The contractor invoked the arbitration clause of its agreement, and the district court stayed its proceedings and required the parties to arbitrate. In considering our appellate jurisdiction, we found jurisdiction over the stay order under the Enelow-Ettleson doctrine, and found jurisdiction over the order compelling arbitration by relying on Rogers and Goodall-Sanford. The language used appeared unambiguously to follow the Rogers rule:
The order compelling commercial arbitration here, like the order compelling labor arbitration in Goodall-Sanford, ... represents the “full relief” sought by Campbell. Once the parties are directed to arbitration, judicial involvement in the controversy for all practical purposes ends, as it is the arbitrator who then resolves all matters in dispute. Hence, the arbitration order [in this case] being neither a step in the judicial enforcement of the disputed claims, nor auxiliary to any main proceeding, is a final decision over which we have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
However, because the order compelling arbitration in Gavlik was entered in an ongoing proceeding, rather than in a separate proceeding, the acceptance of jursidiction was in effect contrary to the rule that this court, sitting in banc, had earlier set forth in Rogers. 5
Although there may, in fact, be very little practical difference in the “normal course of proceedings” between arbitration orders arising out of ongoing cases and arbitration orders arising in a proceeding to compel arbitration,
Rogers,
following the Supreme Court’s lead, enunciated a rule under which only the latter are appealable final orders. To the extent that
Gavlik
is inconsistent with prior precedent, it “must
*560
be deemed without effect.”
O. Hommel Co. v. Ferro Corp.,
It may appear anomalous for the appeal-ability of what amounts to the same order to depend on the procedural posture of the case in the district court. As Judge Friendly long ago observed,
If the slate were clean, a good deal might be said for the position that even though an order directing arbitration seems “final” in the formal sense that it is the last thing the court is then being asked to direct, it should be realistically viewed as an intermediate step in a proceeding that will not result in a truly final decision until an award has been rendered by the arbitrators and an order has been made to enforce it.
Chatham Shipping v. Fertex S.S. Corp.,
We conclude that the district court’s order compelling arbitration in this case is not a final order under section 1291. 7
C.
Other Bases of Jurisdiction
After Gulfstream, the repudiated Enelow-Ettleson doctrine can no longer be used as the basis for appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). The Court nonetheless made clear in Gulfstream that orders formerly appealable under Enelow-Ettleson may be appealable under some other basis. Nothing in its decision, the Court explained,
will ... prevent interlocutory review of district court orders when such review is truly needed. Section 1292(a)(1) will, of course, continue to provide appellate jurisdiction over orders that ... have the practical effect of granting or denying injunctions and have “ ‘serious, perhaps irreparable consequence.’ ” Carson v. American Brands, Inc.,450 U.S. 79 , 84,101 S.Ct. 993 , 996,67 L.Ed.2d 59 (1981).... As for orders that were ap-pealable under § 1292(a)(1) solely by virtue of the Enelow-Ettleson doctrine, they may, in appropriate circumstances, be reviewed under the collateral-order doctrine of § 1291, see Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Corp.,460 U.S. 1 ,103 S.Ct. 927 ,74 L.Ed.2d 765 (1983), and the permissive appeal provision of § 1292(b), as well as by application for writ of mandamus.
*561
Gulfstream,
To be appealable under either the collateral-order doctrine or as a virtual injunction, an order must, among other things, be such that review postponed will, in effect, be review denied.
See Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
Moreover, no irreparable harm will be done to either party by requiring arbitration without an interlocutory appeal.
See Stateside Machinery Co. v. Alperin,
At worst, the parties will have been subjected to the expense of obtaining an arbitration award that ultimately proves to be unenforceable as wrongly ordered; although this would be unfortunate, the prospect is not so grim as to justify departing from the general rule disfavoring piecemeal appeals.
New England Power,
We thus can find no basis for applying section 1292(a)(1) or the collateral order doctrine to an order staying proceedings or compelling the parties in an ongoing lawsuit to arbitrate. 9
D.
Policy Considerations
Although we are not makers of policy, we cannot avoid consideration of the practical effect of our decision that orders staying proceedings or compelling the parties in an ongoing lawsuit to arbitrate are nonap-pealable interlocutory orders. Arbitration is an expeditious and inexpensive mode of alternative dispute resolution. Allowing interlocutory appeals of such orders would defeat the attractiveness of arbitration by imposing delay and additional expense.
*562
See USM Corp. v. GKN Fasteners, Ltd.,
Our holding is also consistent with the Supreme Court’s limitation of appealability of interlocutory orders in other contexts. As the Court has stated, permitting wholesale appeals of orders entered in the course of proceedings “would constitute an unjustified waste of scarce judicial resources.”
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal will be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. We consequently do not reach the merits of any issue presented.
Notes
. One of the terms of the Customer Agreement signed by Zosky on April 4, 1983 provides:
Except as may otherwise be provided by law, it is agreed that any controversy between us arising out of your business or this agreement, shall be submitted to arbitration conducted under the rules then obtaining of either the Philadelphia Stock Exchange or pursuant to the Code of Arbitration Procedure of the National Association of Securities, Dealers, Inc., as the undersigned may elect. Arbitration must be commenced by service upon the other of a written demand for arbitration or a written notice of intention to arbitrate, therein electing the arbitration tribunal. In the event the undersigned does not make such designation within five (5) days of such demand or notice, then the undersigned authorizes you to do so on behalf of the undersigned. Any arbitration hereunder shall be before at least three arbitrators, and the award of the arbitrators, or a majority of *555 them, shall be final. Judgment upon the award rendered may be entered in any court,, state or federal, having jurisdiction.
App. at 32.
. We note that defendants’ counsel accurately described the status of this court’s then prevailing precedent.
See, e.g., Ayres v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith,
. Pursuant to the local rules of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the action was submitted to a court-appointed arbitration panel, which entered an award for defendants on October 24, 1986. As permitted by those rules, Zo-sky filed a demand for jury trial de novo. E.D.Pa. Local Rule 8; see generally Broderick, Compulsory Arbitration: One Better Way, 69 A.B.A.J. 64 (1983).
. The Act also authorizes parties who have completed arbitration to apply to a district court for entry of the award, 9 U.S.C. § 9, or for its vacation, 9 U.S.C. § 10; see also 9 U.S.C. §§ 201-208 (governing recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards and arbitration agreements involving foreign entities).
. We note, however, that because the stay portion of
Gavlik
was appealable under
Enelow-Et-tleson,
the distinction made between the stay and the order compelling arbitration was unnecessary. For example, in
Formigli Corp. v. Alcar Builders, Inc.,
. An examination of this court’s cases citing
Gavlik
reveals bases for appellate jurisdiction other than
Gavlik's
interpretation of section 1291.
See, e.g., Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby, Inc. v. Brown, 732
F.2d 345, 346 (3d Cir.1984) (order compelling arbitration and staying pending state court proceedings appealable final order);
Becker Autoradio v. Becker Autoradiowerk GmbH,
. Judge Hutchinson joins the court’s opinion, believing it correctly reasons from the binding authority set forth in this section that orders directing arbitration in actions brought for the very purpose of compelling it are treated differently from orders directing arbitration when an arbitration clause is asserted as a defense in the course of a continuing suit for other relief. He notes, however, that from the standpoint of judicial efficiency there is much to commend Judge Friendly’s view that all such orders should be treated as non-final and, hence, not appealable under section 1291.
. Zosky suggests, citing
Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover,
. We do not decide whether an order denying a motion for arbitration is distinguishable for purposes of appealability from an order staying proceedings or compelling arbitration.
