This case requires us to determine whether commercial arbitrators have the power and authority to award punitive damages pursuant to a general contractual arbitration clause which does not specifically provide for the award of such damages. In January 1988, appellant Raytheon Company (“Raytheon”) received some unpleasant news. The panel of arbitrators that had presided over an arbitration between Raytheon and a former dealer in Raytheon-manufactured word processing equipment, Automated Business Systems (“Automated”), had found in favor of Automated and had awarded the prevailing party not only compensatory damages, attorneys’ fees and expenses, but also $250,000 in punitive damages. Raytheon sued in federal district court, in the District of Massachusetts, to vacate the entire award. Automated, not surprisingly, opposed the suit and filed a motion seeking confirmation of the arbitral award. The district court refused to vacate, and issued an order confirming the award. Raytheon appealed, although it now seeks to have us vacate only that portion of the arbitrators’ award which imposed punitive damages against it. We affirm.
*7 I.
In 1978, Lexitron, at that time a subsidiary of Raytheon, entered into an exclusive dealership contract with Automated under which Automated would distribute word processing equipment manufactured by Lexitron. The contract was twice extended. Although Raytheon tendered a new proposed agreement in 1982, this document was never executed by the parties, and it appears that they continued to operate under the 1978 agreement until Raytheon terminated their relationship altogether in 1984. The 1978 contract contained a general arbitration clause which provided in relevant part that:
[a]ll disputes arising in connection with the Agreement shall be settled by arbitration ... conducted according to the rules of the American Arbitration Association.
The parties also provided that the law of California would govern the interpretation of the agreement.
In 1986, Automated filed the final version of its demand for arbitration, in which it claimed that Raytheon had breached the parties’ agreement, had violated its duty of good faith and fair dealing, and had committed a number of fraudulent and deceitful acts, rendering it liable to Automated under various tort theories of fraud, deceit and conspiracy, as well as for simple breach of contract. Automated sought compensatory and consequential damages. Additionally, in a single sentence in one of its claims for relief, Automated requested that the arbitrators award punitive damages on the tort claims it had asserted against Raytheon.
On the day the arbitration was to begin, Raytheon responded to Automated’s demand for arbitration with an extensive “Pre-Hearing Memorandum,” which disclaimed liability on any of the theories advanced by Automated. Raytheon also interposed a small counterclaim for the amount of some unpaid expenses allegedly owed it by Automated. Finally, in a single sentence, Raytheon advised the arbitrators that it “d[id] not consent to the submission” of punitive damages issues to the arbitral panel. Ten days of hearings then began before a panel of three arbitrators, two of whom were selected by the parties (one each). During the course of the hearings, Automated introduced a substantial amount of evidence, including evidence which, it believed, supported the award of punitive damages. Raytheon introduced evidence as well and put on what appears to have been a generally comprehensive and spirited defense to Automated’s various claims. Raytheon did not, however, argue the punitive damages issue to the arbitrators. For their part, prior to the issuance of the award, the arbitrators never said anything either way about Automated’s claim for punitive damages or Ray-theon’s statement that it did not consent to the arbitration of the issue.
About a year later, in January 1988, the arbitrators issued an award, with the arbitrator appointed by Raytheon dissenting. Automated was awarded $408,000 in compensatory damages, $121,000 in attorneys’ fees, $47,000 in expenses, and $250,000 in punitive damages. 1 The award contained no explanation for the outcome of the proceedings or for the precise dollar amounts the panel chose to award. The award did, however, make reference to the unexecuted 1982 agreement between Raytheon and Automated, rather than the 1978 agreement under which Automated had brought its claim.
Relying largely on this apparent error, Raytheon filed suit in federal court to vacate the award, alleging that it was facially invalid, inasmuch as it relied on an agreement that had never been in force. Ray-theon also contended that the panel had not been empowered to award punitive damages. Meanwhile, counsel for Automated contacted the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”) and requested it to instruct the panel to correct its error “on an expedited basis” by substituting the proper contract reference. Counsel may also have contacted the neutral arbitrator directly to *8 inform him of the need for a change in the form of the award. 2
As matters turned out, Automated’s counsel need not have contacted the AAA at all, for the district judge himself corrected what he termed the arbitrators’ “innocuous mistake” and amended the erroneous reference to the 1982 agreement to one to the 1978 agreement which had been the subject and focus of the arbitral proceedings. Additionally, relying on general federal arbitration policy, he determined that the agreement’s arbitration clause was sufficiently open-ended to encompass an award of punitive damages and gave no effect to Raytheon’s last minute statement declining to “consent” to arbitration of the punitive damage claims. He confirmed the award.
II.
We begin our analysis with brief discussions of two arguments raised, almost summarily, by Raytheon. Raytheon first contends that the arbitral award should be vacated because the arbitrators did not make any “findings of fact” in support of their award. This position is plainly incorrect, for it has long been settled that arbitrators are not required to make formal “findings of fact” to accompany the awards they issue. Indeed, “[arbitrators have no obligation ... to give their reasons for an award at all.”
United Steelworkers of Am. v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
Raytheon’s second contention is that the arbitrators somehow deprived it of its Fifth Amendment right to due process by “failing to tell Raytheon that [they] intended to reach the issue of punitive damages,” thus denying Raytheon an opportunity to argue the merits of the punitive damages claims during the hearing. This argument suffers on two fronts: it fails to place the relevant events in their proper perspective, and it is not supported by the precedent Raytheon cites.
Turning first to the relevant events, it is undisputed that Raytheon waited until the day arbitral hearings were to commence before it submitted its perfunctory statement regarding the arbitrability of punitive damages claims. It did not ask the panel to rule on the question immediately, nor, when the panel remained mute on this aspect of Raytheon’s submission, did it seek to continue the hearings. (Given the fact that Raytheon buried its one-sentence treatment of the issue in a 34-page memorandum, it is not at all surprising that the arbitrators did not comment on the matter before issuing the award.) Moreover, Ray-theon does not contend that it was prevented from introducing evidence relevant to, or arguing the merits of, punitive damages issues. Nor did the arbitrators take any action or make any affirmative statements which could have led Raytheon to believe that the issue of the arbitrability of punitive damages claims had been decided in its favor. Rather, it appears that Raytheon simply made a judgment that the single sentence in the memorandum would be sufficient to carry the legal issue or that the arbitrators’ silence somehow signaled their agreement with its legal position.
3
Al
*9
though the consequences of this erroneous surmise were, from Raytheon’s perspective, unfortunate, we are unable to see how the arbitrators’ behavior denied Raytheon of its constitutional right to due process.
See Moseley, Hallgarten, Estabrook & Weeden, Inc. v. Ellis,
In addition, we find Raytheon’s position unsupported by the cases upon which it relies. While it is true that in one of the cases the Fifth Circuit did vacate an arbi-tral award on the ground that a party to the arbitration had failed to receive a “ ‘fundamentally fair hearing,’ ”
Totem Marine Tug & Barge, Inc. v. North American Towing,
III.
We come, then, to the central issue in the case. We must determine whether the arbitration clause in the contract before us empowered the arbitral panel to award punitive damages. Since the arbitration clause under consideration was part of a contract which affected interstate commerce, Automated is correct in its contention that the broad policies of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. §§ 1
et seq.,
govern our analysis. This statute expresses the strong federal policy in favor of arbitration. The Supreme Court has spoken generally to the effect that “any doubts concerning the scope of arbitrable issues should be resolved in favor of arbitration, whether the problem at hand is the construction of the contract itself or an allegation of waiver, delay, or a like defense to arbitrability.”
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Constr.,
We turn initially to the text of the Ray-theon-Automated arbitration clause, noting two important aspects of the language the parties chose. First, the arbitration clause is neither limited in its scope nor optional in its application; rather, it states unequivocally that “[a]ll disputes” arising from the contract “shall be settled” through arbitration (emphasis added). Second, it explicitly requires arbitration to be conducted under the rules of the AAA. Among these rules, with which one must expect a sophisticated commercial party like Raytheon to be intimately familiar, is Rule 42, which empowers AAA arbitrators to “grant any remedy or relief which is just and equitable and within the terms of the agreement of the *10 parties.” 4 Combining these two observations, the specific question we must answer may be best phrased as whether, when Automated and Raytheon agreed to “settle” through arbitration “all disputes” arising under their contract and to authorize the arbitrator to grant any just and equitable remedy or relief, they agreed to include “within the terms of [their] agreement” the power to award punitive damages.
Were we to confine our analysis to the plain language of the arbitration clause, we would have little trouble concluding that a contract clause which bound the parties to “settle” “all disputes” through arbitration conducted according to rules which allow any form of “just and equitable” “remedy of relief” was sufficiently broad to encompass the award of punitive damages. Inasmuch as agreements to arbitrate are “generously construed,”
Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth,
Relying on two labor arbitration cases (one of them our own), Raytheon argues that arbitrators must have explicit contractual authorization before they can award punitive damages.
See Bacardi Corp. v. Congreso de Uniones Industriales de Puerto Rico,
Commercial arbitration, by contrast and as this case itself exemplifies, is normally considered a one-shot endeavor, in which the parties have chosen arbitration not as a means of ongoing dispute resolution, but as
*11
a “simpl[e], informal ], and expeditions]” method of resolving a particular dispute.
Mitsubishi Motors,
Commercial arbitration cases seem to have taken three different approaches to the punitive damages question. Several jurisdictions, following the lead of the New York Court of Appeals in a 1976 decision, have determined, as a matter of the law of particular states, that arbitrators can never award punitive damages. These decisions are predicated on the theory that punitive damages are a form of sanction reserved to the State alone, one which can never be applied — even with consent — in purely private disputes.
Garrity v. Lyle Stuart, Inc.,
Similarly, we reject a position recently adopted by an intermediate state court in California, under which punitive damages could be awarded by a commercial arbitrator only if the parties’ agreement to arbitrate specifically provided for the possibility of punitive damages awards.
Belko,
Most prominent among the federal cases is the Eleventh Circuit’s
Bonar
decision, in which the court, adopting the third approach to the arbitrability of punitive damages, upheld a punitive damages award although the arbitration agreement contained no express mention of such relief.
Bonar
held that the parties’ incorporation of the AAA Rules, including Rule 42, “authorized the arbitrators to award punitive damages.”
Raytheon has cited no federal case, and stated at oral argument that it was not aware of any federal case, that reaches a contrary result in the commercial arbitration context. We have been similarly unable to find a federal decision which supports Raytheon’s position and can see no reasoned justification for departing from the rule laid down by our colleagues in other parts of the nation. Like them, we agree that punitive damages can serve as an effective deterrent to malicious or fraudulent conduct. Where such conduct could give rise to punitive damages if proved to a court, there is no compelling reason to prohibit a party which proves the same conduct to a panel of arbitrators from recovering the same damages. Certainly, the fact that the parties agreed to resolve their dispute through an expedited and less formal procedure does not mean that they should be required to surrender a legitimate claim to damages. Parties that do wish arbitration provisions to exclude punitive damages claims are free to draft agreements that do so explicitly. In this case, no such exclusion from the general language of the arbitration clause exists. Accordingly, we conclude that the district correctly ruled that the arbitrators were authorized to award punitive damages against Raytheon.
Conclusion
The decision of the district court is
AFFIRMED
Notes
. Raytheon received $8700 on its counterclaim.
. Raytheon does not challenge these actions in this appeal, and they appear to have had no effect whatever on the course of the litigation. We do not address in this decision either the propriety or the implications of ex parte contact with arbitrators.
. We note that Raytheon does not argue that by arbitrating the merits it would have waived its right to assert that the award of punitive damages was beyond the power of the arbitrators, nor are we aware of any authority that would support any such claim.
Cf. Jones Dairy Farm v. Local No. P-1236, United Food and Commercial Workers Int'l Union, AFL-CIO,
. The Rule quoted in the text is, under the current version of the AAA Rules, Rule 43. See Domke on Commercial Arbitration, (Wilner revd. ed. 1988), App. VII at 53. For purposes of this opinion, we refer to the rule as Rule 42, adopting the designation in effect at the time the parties’ agreement was in force and at the time of the arbitration.
. In looking to the caselaw on this subject, we adopt the view, expressed by a number of other courts, that the contract’s choice-of-law provision does not require us to determine the punitive damages question by looking to the law of the chosen forum (in this case, California). Rather, we, like they, look to federal common law for our answer. We agree with these other courts that both the parties’ adoption of the AAA rules (particularly Rule 42,
supra), Bonar v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
Volt Information Sciences, Inc. v. Board of Trustees of the Leland Standford Junior Univ.,
— U.S. —,
