MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiff, James A. Stone (“Stone”), a former employee and registered securities rep *318 resentative of Defendant, Pennsylvania Merchant Group, Ltd. (“Merchant”), brought this action for breach of employment contract, defamation, and violation of Pennsylvania’s Wage Payment and Collection Law, Pa.Stat. Ann. tit. 43, §§ 260.1-.12 (1992). Merchant moves for an order dismissing the complaint of Stone, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), or granting summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 66, or in the alternative, staying this action and compelling arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act (the “FAA”), 9 U.S.C.A §§ 1-16 (West 1970 & Supp.1996). For the reasons stated below, I will stay this action pursuant to § 3 of the FAA until arbitration has been had between the parties pursuant to the terms of the arbitration agreement.
BACKGROUND
Merchant employed Stone as a securities analyst during a period beginning in June 1992 and ending in November 1994. Following the termination of Stone’s employment relationship with Merchant, Stone filed this action in diversity against Merchant on June 23, 1995, seeking compensatory and punitive damages, statutory liquidated damages, and reasonable attorney’s fees. In the complaint, Stone alleges that the parties entered into two employment contracts, in May 1992 and June 1994 respectively, in which Merchant promised Stone various minimum levels of compensation and bonuses. In Counts One and Two of the complaint, Stone alleges that Merchant breached the employment contracts by failing to pay the full amount of compensation and bonuses due under the contracts. In Count Three of the complaint, Stone sets forth a tort/defamation claim in which he alleges that Merchant intentionally gave him false information about a company it was promoting so that Stone would prepare a falsely positive report about the company’s prospects. He alleges that Merchant profited by selling the company’s stock at artificially high prices, and that when the company subsequently failed, Stone’s reputation as a reliable analyst in the industry was damaged. Finally, in Count Four, Stone seeks to recover unpaid wages, liquidated damages, and reasonable attorney’s fees under Pennsylvania’s Wage Payment and Collection Law.
Shortly after he commenced employment with Merchant, Stone executed a Uniform Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer, commonly referred to as a Form U-4. The Form U-4 is a generic application that is used to register with one or more self-regulatory organizations and state jurisdictions. In Item 10 of the U-4 application, Stone indicated that he desired registration with the National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”) and with the jurisdictions of New York and Pennsylvania. The Form U-4 identifies Merchant as Stone’s current firm with which he was employed. On the signature page of the U-4 application, ten paragraphs are locatеd immediately above the applicant signature line and immediately below a bold heading stating that “THE APPLICANT MUST READ THE FOLLOWING VERY CAREFULLY.” Paragraph 2 states in relevant part:
in consideration of the jurisdictions and organizations receiving and considering my application, I submit to the authority of the jurisdictions and organizations and agree to comply with all provisions, conditions and covenants of the statutes, constitutions, certificates of incorporation, by-laws and rules and regulations of the jurisdictions and organizations as they are or may be adopted, or amended from time to time.
Furthermore, paragraph 5 of the U-4 states:
I agree to arbitrate any dispute, claim or controversy that 'may arise between me and my firm, or a customer, or any other person, that is required to be arbitrated under the rules, constitutions, or by-laws of the organizations indicated in Item 10 as may be amended from time to time....
Stone signed the Form U-4 on the applicant signature line immediately below these paragraphs and filled in the date as June 22, 1992. No signature line for the applicant’s firm exists in this portion of the Form U-4.
On July 18, 1995, Merchant moved for an order staying this action pending arbitration on the basis of the Form U-4 that Stone executed. On February 28, 1996, I denied this motion without prejudice because the materials the parties had submitted were *319 insufficient to decide the motion. On March 13, 1996, Merchant renewed its motion for arbitration, the instant motion under consideration now, and submitted additional materials in support of its' motiоn. On April 16, 1996, Stone filed a response opposing Merchant’s motion and also submitted additional materials in opposition to the motion.
Merchant contends that it is entitled to an order under the FAA staying this action pending arbitration because Stone agreed in the Form U-4 application to arbitrate any dispute with his firm that is required to be arbitrated under the rules of the organizations with which Stone sought to register. Merchant claims that because Stone sought registration with the NASD, and because the NASD rules require arbitration of the claims at issue in this action, Stone must resolve his claims against Merchant through arbitration rather than in federal court.
Stone contends that Merchant is not entitled to a stay under the FAA becausе he claims that Stone never entered into an agreement with Merchant to arbitrate and because even if a valid agreement to arbitrate does exist between Stone and Merchant, the particular claims asserted in Stone’s complaint are not within the scope of that arbitration agreement. Stone claims that Merchant has no contractual standing to enforce the Form U-4 application because Stone was not a party to the agreement, which was an agreement exclusively between. Stone and the NASD, and because Merchant did not give Stone any independent consideration for signing the Form U-4, whether in the form of employment or in the assumption of a mutuality of obligation. Stone also argues that even if Merchant does have contractual standing to enforce the agreement, the NASD rules do not require arbitration of employment-related disputes, and furthermore, that even if they do include employment-related disputes, his claims for tort/defamation and his claims under Pennsylvania’s Wage Payment and Collection Law are not employment-related.
DISCUSSION
Section 2 of the FAA states that “[a] written provision in any ... contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce to settle by arbitration a controversy thereafter arising out of such contract ... 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.A. § 2 (West 1970). Section 3 of the FAA, the provision under which Merchant seeks relief, provides:
If any suit or proceeding be brought in any of the courts of the United States upon any issue referable to arbitration under an agreement in writing for such arbitration, the court in which such suit is pending, upon being satisfied that the issue involved in such suit or proceeding is referable to arbitration under such an agreement, shall on application of one of the parties stay the trial of the action until such arbitration has been had in accordance with the terms of the agreement....
9 U.S.C.A. § 3 (West 1970). Thus, my inquiry at this stage is limited: I must determine whether an agreement to arbitrate exists and whether the claims at issue in this action are referable to arbitration under that agreement; if they are, I must stay this action until arbitration has been had pursuant to the terms of the agreement.
I will first address Stone’s claim that Merchant has no contractual standing to enforce the U-4 arbitration agreement. 1 Because I *320 conclude that Merchant may enforce the agreement as a third-party beneficiary, I will then address Stone’s claim that the disputes at issue in this action do not fall within the scope of the U-4 arbitration agreement.
1. Merchant’s Contractual Standing to Enforce the U-4 Arbitration Agreement
Stone contends that Merchant has no contractual standing to enforce the U-4 arbitration agreement because Merchant was not a pаrty to the U-4 agreement and because Merchant allegedly gave Stone no consideration in exchange for executing the U-4 application. Even if no agreement to arbitrate existed directly between Merchant and Stone, an issue I need not decide here, Merchant may enforce the U-4 arbitration agreement as an intended third party beneficiary of the agreement. 2
It is well established in the federal courts that an arbitration agreement may be enforced by or against a nonsignatory party under traditional principles of agency or contract law.
See, e.g., Pritzker v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
To determine whether Merchant is a third-party beneficiary, I must turn to state law. The United States Supreme Court explained in
Perry v. Thomas,
[ T]he text of § 2 [of the FAA] provides the touchstone for choosing between state-law principles and the principles of federal common law envisioned by the passage of that statute: An agreement to arbitrate is valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, as a matter of federal law, ‘save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.’ Thus state law, whether of legislative or judicial origin, is applicable if that law arose to govern issues concerning the validity, re-vocability, and enforceability of contracts generally.
Id.
at 492 n. 9,
Under Pennsylvania law,
3
a party is an intended third-party beneficiary if “both parties to the contract express an intention to benefit the third party in the contract itself,”
Scarpitti v. Weborg,
In this case, Stone promised the NASD that he would arbitrate any dispute arising between himself and his firm, Merchant, that was required to be arbitrated under NASD rules. Thus, by explicitly referring to Stone’s “firm,” which was identified elsewhere in the U-4 application as Merchant, the parties expressly contemplated in the contract itself that Merchant would be a beneficiary of the agreement. Furthermore, the NASD rules require arbitration, in relevant part, only “at the instance of ... a member against a person associated with a member.” § 8(a)(2), NASD Manual (CCH) ¶3708 (1995) (emphasis added). In other words, the NASD requires Stone to arbitrate only when Merchant wants Stone to arbitrate. If Merchant does not request arbitration, the NASD rules do not require Stone to arbitrate the dispute, and Stone is free to litigate his claims against Merchant in a judicial forum. Thus, by exacting a promise from Stone that he would perform whenever, and only whenever, Merchant wanted Stone to perform, the NASD revealed an intent to provide Merchant with the promised performance, arbitration, whenever Merchant viewed such pеrformance as beneficial. Under these circumstances, I find that the NASD intended to give Merchant the benefit of Stone’s promise to arbitrate and that recognizing Merchant’s right under the con *322 tract to Stone’s performance of his promise is appropriate to effectuate the intentions of the parties. Accordingly, Merchant is an intended third-party beneficiary of the U-4 arbitration agreement under Pennsylvania law and may therefore enforce the agreement against Stone. 4
II. Arbitrability of Stone’s Claims
Having concluded that Merchant may enforce the arbitration agreement as an intended third-party beneficiary, I must now decide whether the claims at issue in this action fall within the scope of the U-4 arbitration clause. Arbitration is a matter of contract, and the parties are therefore required to arbitrate only those particular disputes that they have agreed to arbitrate.
See PaineWebber Inc. v. Hartmann,
In thе U-4 application, Stone agreed to “arbitrate any dispute, claim or controversy that may arise between me and my firm ... that is required to be arbitrated under the rules, constitutions, or by-laws of the organizations indicated in Item 10 as may be amended from time to time.” Stone indicated the NASD in Item 10 of the U-4 application. Stone also agreed to “submit to the authority of the jurisdictions and organizations” indicated in Item 10 and “to comply with all provisions, conditions and covenants of the statutes, constitutions, certificates of incorporation, by-laws and rules and regulations of the jurisdictions and organizations as they are or may be adopted, or amended from time to time.”
Part I of the NASD Code of Arbitration Procedure provides that “any dispute, claim, or controversy ... arising out of the employment or termination of employment of associated person(s) with any member” is eligible for arbitration. § 1, NASD Manual (CCH) ¶ 3701 (1995). Part II of the NASD Code then provides, in relevant part, that “[a]ny dispute, claim, or controversy eligible for submission under Part I of this Code between or among members and/or associated persons ... arising out of the employment or termination of employment of such associated person(s) with such member” is required to be arbitrated if either the member or the associated person requests arbitration. § 8, NASD Manual (CCH) ¶3708 (1995). The parties do not dispute that Merchant is a member of the NASD, that Stone is a person associated with a member of the NASD, and that Merchant requests arbitration under the NASD Code of Arbitration. Thus, if the claims set forth in Stone’s complaint against Merchant arise out of his employment or the termination of his employment with Merchant, Stone is required under the NASD Code of Arbitration to arbitrate those claims.
*323
Stone contends, however, that the U-4 arbitration agreement does not require him to arbitrate employment-related disputes. He argues that the NASD Code of Arbitration did not cover employment-related disputes until October 1993, when the Code was amended to explicitly include employment-related disputes, more than a year after he signed the U-4 agreement. He contends that he is bound to arbitrate only those disрutes that were required to be arbitrated under the NASD Code at the time he signed the U-4 application and that, in his view as just stated, the Code did not cover employment-related disputes at that time. I find this contention unpersuasive because Stone agreed to arbitrate all disputes required to be arbitrated under the NASD rules and to comply with all NASD rules “as they ... may be adopted, or amended from time to time.” The NASD rules, as amended, require Stone to arbitrate employment-related disputes, and thus, as he promised, he must arbitrate them.
5
See In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. Sales Practices Litigation,
Stone relies on
Kresock v. Banlcers Trust Co.,
Having determined that Stone agreed to arbitrate employment-related disputes with Merchant, I must now determine whether Stone’s claims against Merchant are employment-related. Stone concedes that the breach of employment contract claims contained in Counts One and Two of the complaint are arbitrable if the U-4 arbitration agreement covers employment-related disputes, see PL’s Resp.Def.’s Mot. Dismiss Compl. at 25-26, which I have found that it does. Stone contends, however, that his defamation claim in Count Three and his claim under Pennsylvania’s Wage Payment and Collection Law, Pa.Stat.Ann. tit. 43, §§ 260.1-.12 (1992), in Count Four do not fall within the scope of the U-4 arbitration agreement because neither claim arises out of his employment or the termination of his employment with Merchant. See Pl.’s Resp. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss Compl. at 25-27. I will address each claim in turn.
The federal courts have routinely held that a variety of tort claims, including defamation claims, are arbitrable as. claims “arising out of the employment” relationship within the meaning of either the NASD rules or the NYSE rules upon which they are based,
see
58 Fed.Reg. 39,070, 39,071 (1993). The prevailing test applied by the courts in interpreting this language is whether the tort claims involve significant aspects of the employment relationship or whether resolution of the tort claims will require an evaluation of either the еmployee’s or the employer’s performance in the course of the employment relationship.
See, e.g., Morgan v. Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co.,
Stone’s defamation claim is based on the alleged facts that Merchant conspired with Image Business Systems (“IBS”), a company it was promoting, to “fеed Plaintiff false, inaccurate, and inflated information about the company’s post-initial public offering prospects, thus inducing Plaintiff to prepare unwittingly and innocently, a positive but false report that was used by Defendant’s salesmen to promote the sale of IBS in the market.” Complaint ¶ 27. When the company subsequently failed and the inaccuracy of Stone’s report became apparent, Stone’s “reputation as an analyst in the said industries was tarnished and injured.” Complaint ¶ 28.
In essence, then, Stone’s claim is that Merchant assigned him to write a false report, which hurt his reputation as a reliable analyst when the report’s falsity became known in the industry. Stone prepared the report as рart of his job as a research analyst with Merchant. It is this report and the conditions surrounding its preparation that form the basis of Stone’s defamation claim against Merchant; thus, Stone’s defamation claim certainly involves significant aspects of his employment with Merchant. Moreover, resolution of his claim will require, among other things, an evaluation of what information about IBS Merchant gave Stone in the course of his employment, the degree of independent verification of that information that Whs expected of an employee in Stone’s position, whether Stone’s report was a fair representation of the information that Merchant gave him or that he independently gathered, аnd whether Stone knew or should- have known that the information embodied in the report was false. Resolving these questions will require a significant evaluation of Stone’s performance of his duties in the course of his employment with Merchant. Accordingly, I find that Stone’s defamation claim is a claim “arising out of’ his employment relationship with Merchant and that it is therefore arbi-trable under the NASD Code , of Arbitration.
Stone contends, however, that his defamation claim does not arise out of his employment with Merchant because it states “allegations of tort” that “have nothing to do with the contract entered into between PMG [Merchant] and Stone.”
See
PL’s Resp. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss Compl. at 27. This contention fails because Stone аgreed to arbitrate all disputes arising out of his employment, not merely those arising out of his employment contract.
Cf. Morgan,
Stone also cites
Coudert v. Paine Webber Jackson & Curtis,
As for
Zechman,
the second case that Stone cites in support of his contention that his defamation claim is not arbitrable, Stone’s reliance on this case is misplaced.
Zechman
involved a dispute between two members of the Chicago Board оf Trade (“CBOT”) who had agreed to arbitrate any dispute “aris[ing] out of the
Exchange business
of such parties.”
See Zechman,
Little needs to be said with respect to Stone’s claim under Pennsylvania’s Wage Payment and Collection Law. The only argument Stone advances for why these claims arе not arbitrable is that
Zechman
held claims under Illinois’s Wage Payment and Collection Law nonarbitrable.
See
Pl.’s Resp. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss Compl. at 26. As already discussed,
Zechman
has no bearing on this case because it involved an interpretation of a CBOT rule requiring arbitration of disputes concerning the exchange-related business of CBOT members, rather than employment-related disputes. Indeed, the court in
Zechman
held that the statutory wage claims were nonarbitrable precisely because they “turn exclusively on the independent employer-employee relationship” and thus were “too remote” to implicate the parties’ exchange-related business.
See Zechman,
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, I have found that Merchant may enforce the U-4 arbitration agreement as an intended third-party beneficiary, that Stone agreed to arbitrate ail disputes with Merchant arising out of his employment or the termination thereof, and that all of the claims Stone alleges in his complaint against Merchant arise out of his employment with Merchant. Therefore, because I find that all of the issues involved in this action are referable to arbitration under the written agreemеnt in the U-4 application to arbitrate, I will stay the proceedings in this action under § 3 of the FAA until arbitration has been had between the parties pursuant to terms of the U-4 arbitration agreement.
Notes
. Stone also contends that regardless of who may enforce the Form U-4 arbitration agreement, the contract itself is too vague and illusory to create an enforceable contract obligation. He contends that the agreement is illusory because an applicant could seek registration with several organizations and that the applicant could thus be agreeing to arbitrate under several different codes of arbitration covering divergent categories of disputes. See Pl.’s Resp. Def.’s Mоt. Dismiss Compl. at 17-18. Stone himself, however, sought registration only with the NASD and thus the U-4 arbitration agreement at issue here is. not plagued by the hypothetical problems that Stone suggests. Moreover, I fail to see any fatal inconsistency posed by an agreement to arbitrate under the rules of each organization in which the applicant seeks membership. There is nothing illusory or vague in agreeing to arbitrate disputes that the New York Stock Exchange requires to be arbitrated, even if the NASD, which the applicant also wants to join, does not, or vice versa; Stone makes no claim that any of the organizations *320 prohibit arbitration of all disputes that they do not affirmatively require to be arbitrated.
. Although Merchant failed to address Stone’s lengthy arguments that Merchant has no contractual standing to enforce the U-4 arbitration agreement, I believe that the circumstances of this case require consideration of Merchant’s status as a third-party beneficiary.
. Because Stone argues that Pennsylvania law is applicable to this contract and Merchant offers no objection, I will apply Pennsylvania law.
. Stone contends that even if the Form U-4 is an agreement to arbitrate that Merchant can enforce, the Form U-4 governs only the claims arising out of the first employment contract, which was entered into in May 1992, and not the second employment contract, which was entered into in June 1994. Stone arguеs that this conclusion follows from the fact that execution of the second employment contract was not accompanied by execution of a new Form U-4.
See
Pl.’s Resp. Def.'s Mot. Dismiss Compl. at 11 n. 11. This argument fails, however, because the Form U-4 was not a contract with Merchant, as Stone himself argues, but a separate contract with the NASD.
See id.
at 7-17. Therefore, the termination of Stone’s first employment contract with Merchant and the execution of a second employment contract with Merchant does not revoke Stone's independent contract with the NASD.
See In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. Sales Practices Litigation,
. Although I offer no opinion on the issue, I note that there is a substantial body of casеlaw that finds employment-related disputes arbitrable under the pre-amendment NASD Code of Arbitration.
See Armijo v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
