OPINION OF THE COURT
This case is before us on remand from the United States Supreme Court. Appellants Keith Litman and Robert Wachtel had earlier asked us to reverse an order of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey compelling them to arbitrate their contract dispute with Célico Partnership d/b/a Verizon Wireless (“Verizon”) on an individual rather than a class-
*227
wide basis. In an unpublished opinion and order filed May 21, 2010, we vacated the District Court’s order because a recent precedent of ours bound us to conclude that class arbitration should have been available to the appellants.
Litman v. Cellco P’ship,
I. Background
Verizon provides' wireless telephone service to millions of customers nationwide. Litman and Wachtel were among that number. They each entered into a Customer Agreement (the “Agreements”) pursuant to which Verizon supplied them cell phone service for a fixed monthly price.
Beginning on or about September 30, 2005, Verizon allegedly began to impose on its fixed-price customers a “bogus, unlawful, and inequitable”- monthly administrative charge of forty cents. (App. at 26-27.) Later, in March 2007, it allegedly charged fixed-price customers an improper seventy-cent administrative charge. According to Litman and Wachtel, the added charges amounted to a “unilateral price increase for all of its customers,” in violation of Verizon’s contractual obligation to provide cell phone service at a fixed price. (App. at 27, 35-37.) On that theory, Litman and Wachtel filed this putative class action.
The complaint asserts three claims: breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and violations of the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act, N.J. Stat. Ann. §§ 56:8-1, et seq. Verizon moved to compel individual arbitration pursuant to the following clause in the Agreements: 1
WE EACH AGREE TO SETTLE DISPUTES ... ONLY BY ARBITRATION
* * :|:
(1) THE FEDERAL ARBITRATION ACT APPLIES TO THIS AGREEMENT ... ANY CONTROVERSY OR CLAIM ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT, OR ANY PRIOR AGREEMENT FOR WIRELESS SERVICE WITH [VERIZON] ... WILL BE SETTLED BY ONE OR MORE NEUTRAL ARBITRATORS BEFORE THE AMERICAN ARBITRATION ASSOCIATION (“AAA”) OR BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU (“BBB”).
(3) ... THIS AGREEMENT DOESN’T PERMIT CLASS ARBI-TRATIONS EVEN IF TH[E] PROCEDURES [OF THE AAA OR BBB] WOULD.
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(6) IF FOR SOME REASON THE PROHIBITION ON CLASS ARBI-TRATIONS SET FORTH IN SUBSECTION (3) ... IS DEEMED UNENFORCEABLE, THEN THE AGREEMENT TO ARBITRATE WILL NOT APPLY. FURTHER, IF FOR ANY REASON A CLAIM PROCEEDS IN COURT RATHER THAN THROUGH ARBITRATION, WE EACH WAIVE ANY TRIAL BY JURY.
(App. at 54-55, 71-72.)
Litman and Wachtel opposed Verizon’s motion to compel individual arbitration, arguing that, pursuant to the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision in
Muhammad v. County Bank of Rehoboth Beach, Delaware,
After the opening and answering briefs had been submitted, we decided
Homa v. American Express Co.,
Not surprisingly, Litman and Waehtel moved for summary reversal in this case, based on our decision in
Homa.
We agreed that reversal was required.
4
See Litman,
Verizon filed a motion to stay our mandate pending the filing of a petition for writ of certiorari. We allowed the stay, and Verizon filed its petition. On May 2, 2011, the Supreme Court granted Verizon’s petition, vacated our May 2010 opinion and order, and remanded the case for our review in light of its newly issued opinion in
AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion. See Cellco P’ship,
*230 II. Discussion 6
The specific question before us remains whether the FAA preempts the New Jersey Supreme Court’s ruling in Muhammad. As noted above, we had previously held that, pursuant to Homo, it did not. We now examine that decision anew and hold that Homa has been abrogated by Concepcion and that Muhammad is preempted by the FAA.
Section 2 of the FAA, the “primary substantive provision of the Act,”
Moses H. Cone Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp.,
[a] written provision in any ... contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce to settle by arbitration a controversy thereafter arising out of such contract or transaction ... shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.
9 U.S.C. § 2 (emphasis added.) Thus, consistent with § 2, “generally applicable contract defenses, such as fraud, duress, or unconscionability, may be applied to invalidate arbitration agreements.”
Doctor’s
Assocs.,
Inc. v. Casarotto,
As is obvious from our decisions in
Gay
and
Homa,
this case is not our first effort to reconcile waivers of class arbitration with state court decisions reflecting public policies against such waivers. In our initial ruling in this case, we discussed the tension between
Gay
and
Homa
and decided we had to follow
Homa,
since it addressed precisely the question at issue here, namely whether New Jersey’s
Muhammad
decision forbidding class arbitration waivers could withstand the preemptive sweep of the FAA. “We are bound by precedential opinions of our Court[,]” we observed, “unless they have been reversed by an en banc proceeding or have been adversely affected by an opinion of the Supreme Court.”
hitman,
The Supreme Court’s more recent opinion in
Concepcion
works just such a change in the law. The Court addressed “whether the FAA prohibits States from conditioning the enforceability of certain arbitration agreements on the availability of classwide arbitration procedures.”
In dispatching the reasoning and rule of Discover Bank, the Supreme Court stated that the clause in § 2 of the FAA that requires enforcement of an arbitration agreement “save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract!,]” does not “preserve state-law rules that stand as an obstacle to the accomplishment of the FAA’s objectives.” Id. at 1748. In the Court’s view, “[Requiring the availability of classwide arbitration interferes with fundamental attributes of arbitration and thus creates a scheme inconsistent with the FAA.” Id. More specifically, the Court held that requiring the availability of class action mechanisms undermines the “principal purpose of the FAA[, which] is to ensure that private arbitration agreements are enforced according to their terms.” Id. (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted). Further, the Court determined that the FAA’s objective of “affording parties discretion in designing arbitration processes ... to allow for efficient, streamlined!,]” tailored mechanisms to address a dispute, id. at 1749, is compromised by state rules “[requiring the availability of classwide arbitration,” id. at 1748. The Court reasoned that “the switch from bilateral to class arbitration sacrifices the principal advantage of arbitration — its informality— and makes the process slower, more costly, and more likely to generate procedural morass than final judgment,” id. at 1751, not to mention that it increases the “risks to defendants,” id. at 1752. Accordingly, the Supreme Court held that California’s Discover Bank rule stood “as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress ... [and was] preempted by the FAA.” Id. at 1753 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
We understand the holding of Concepcion to be both broad and clear: a state law that seeks to impose class arbitration despite a contractual agreement for individualized arbitration is inconsistent with, and therefore preempted by, the FAA, irrespective of whether class arbitration “is desirable for unrelated reasons.” Id. at 1753. Therefore, we must hold that, contrary to our earlier decisions in Homa and in this case, the rule established by the New Jersey Supreme Court in Muhammad is preempted by the FAA. It follows that the arbitration clause at issue here must be enforced according to its terms, which requires individual arbitration and forecloses class arbitration. 8
*232 III. Conclusion
Because the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Concepcion
holds that state law “[r]equiring the availability of classwide arbitration ... is inconsistent with the FAA[,]”
Notes
. Litman’s relationship with Verizon was governed by a November 2006 Agreement and Wachtel’s by a September 2007 Agreement. The arbitration clause in each is identical.
. In
Muhammad,
the New Jersey Supreme Court examined a class arbitration waiver in a consumer contract of adhesion, specifically a payday loan agreement, and held that that waiver was unconscionable, and as such unenforceable, because it deprived “Muhammad of the mechanism of a class-wide action, whether in arbitration or in court litigation."
. More precisely,
Gay
reviewed two Pennsylvania Superior Court cases,
Lytle v. CitiFinancial Services, Inc.,
. Before we reached that decision, Verizon moved to stay the appeal pending our
en banc
consideration of
Puleo v. Chase Bank USA,
in which we addressed whether the question of arbitrability, specifically the contention that a class action waiver was unconscionable and therefore unenforceable, was for a court or arbitrator to decide.
. That discussion was dicta because "our holding in
Gay
was that Virginia law governed the parties’ arbitration agreement.”
Puleo,
. The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d). We have jurisdiction pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(3). "We exercise plenary review over [a] District Court’s decision to compel arbitration.”
Trippe Mfg. Co. v. Niles Audio Corp.,
. Like the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision in
Muhammad,
the California Supreme Court held in
Discover Bank
that class arbitration waivers in consumer adhesion contracts are unconscionable and contrary to public policy when the "disputes between the contracting parties predictably involve small amounts of damages, and when it is alleged that the party with the superior bargaining. power has ... deliberately cheat[ed] large numbers of consumers out of individually small sums of money.”
. Litman and Wachtel make two arguments against this outcome, neither of which is compelling. First, they posit that their Agreements with Verizon stipulate that New Jersey
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law — most significantly
Muhammad
— applies, not federal law. (Appellant Supp. Br. at 1.) The Agreements’ choice of law provision reads that, "[ejxcept to the extent we’ve agreed otherwise in the provision! ] on ... arbitration, or as required by Federal law” disputes are to be "governed by the laws of the state encompassing the area code assigned to [Litman and Wachtel’s] phone number^] when [Litman and Wachtel] accepted th[e] agreements].” (App. at 55, 72.) The arbitration provision reads that the FAA applies to the Agreements (App. at 72) and, independent of that, the FAA governs the duty to honor arbitration agreements.
See
9 U.S.C. §§ 1,
et seq.; Invista S.A.R.L. v. Rhodia,
S.A.,
