As a general rule, the courts of appeals have jurisdiction only over the final decisions of the district courts. There are certain exceptions and qualifications to that principle, however. In this case we must decide whether any of them allow us to review several district court orders which, pursuant to the mandate of an earlier decision of our court, awarded fees to a receiver before final judgment had been entered. Concluding that none apply, we dismiss for want of appellate jurisdiction.
I.
We set out the tangled factual and procedural history of this long-running case in our earlier opinion.1 We summarize briefly now.
This case began back in the spring of 2009, as a contractual dispute between Netsphere, Inc., and Jeffrey Baron.2 As the litigation ensued, one of Baron’s companies, Ondova Limited Company, declared bankruptcy, automatically staying the district court action. During this stage of the case, as in earlier proceedings, Baron repeatedly hired and fired his lawyers.3 “The bankruptcy creditors and Ondova eventually agreed to a settlement, but Baron continued to hire new lawyers. Many of the lawyers claimed they had not been paid and began to file claims for legal fees in the bankruptcy proceeding.”4 As proceedings continued, both the bankruptcy court and the bankruptcy trustee became increasingly concerned over Baron’s fail*330ure to pay his current or former lawyers.5 Eventually, on the recommendation of the bankruptcy court, the district court appointed Peter S. Vogel as receiver over Baron.6
Baron appealed the district court’s order appointing the receiver. In Netsphere v. Baron, Inc. (“Netsphere I”) we reversed, holding that the -district court had “no authority to ... establish[ ] a receivership” in order “to control Baron’s hiring, firing, and non-payment of numerous attorneys.” 7 We next turned to the question of who should bear the costs expended by the improper receivership. We held that our “precedents establish that equity controls when addressing the costs created by an improper receivership.”8 Because “the record supported] that the circumstances that led to the appointment of a receiver were primarily of Baron’s own making,” we ruled that “charging the current receivership fund for reasonable receivership expenses, without allowing any additional assets to be sold, is an equitable solution.”9 On remand, in addition to. awarding new fees, we also ordered the district court to reconsider all receivership fees and expenses it had previously ordered to be paid. We reasoned that these “[flees already paid were calculated on the basis that the receivership was proper” but “[i]n light of our ruling that the receivership was improper, equity may well require the fees to be discounted meaningfully from what would have been reasonable under a proper receivership.”10
Before the Netsphere I mandate issued, the district court entered several orders approving interim fee applications submitted by the receiver and its counsel. After the mandate issued, and the case was remanded, the district court then entered an order reconsidering the fees it had previously awarded to the receiver, its counsel, and the Ondova bankruptcy trustee. It also authorized new payments to the receiver and to one of its counsel, Dykema Gossett PLLC.
These appeals of the various fee orders follow.11
II.
Both sides implore us to decide this appeal. While we sympathize with their desire for resolution, we lack the power to do so.
*331Our appellate jurisdiction is normally limited to “final decisions of the district courts of the United States.”12 These decisions “end[] the litigation on the merits and leave[] nothing for the court to .do but execute the judgment.”13 That is not what we have here. No final judgment has been entered and the underlying breach of contract dispute that formed the original basis for this litigation remains undecided. Moreover, even within the context of the receivership, the district court’s orders merely authorizes certain cash payments to the receivership and its counsel; they do not purport to enter a final judgment winding-up or terminating the receivership. Indeed, it was not until two years after the orders in this case were issued that the district court finally entered an order directing the termination of the receivership upon the payment of certain court-approved fees and expenses.14 That order has since been appealed and will be addressed in the normal course by another panel of our court.15,
There are two potential avenues for appellate jurisdiction absent a final decision of the district court: one based in statute, one in federal common law. Neither has purchase in this case.
A.
In 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(2), Congress granted a limited right to appellate review of certain interlocutory orders related to receivers, providing:
[Tjhe courts of appeals shall have jurisdiction of appeals from: [interlocutory orders appointing receivers, or refusing orders to wind up receiverships or to take steps to áccomplish the purposes thereof, such as directing sales or other disposals of property.16
It is undisputed that the challenged fee orders are not “orders appointing receivers.” Nor did the district court “refus[e] orders to wind up receiverships.” Just the opposite, in fact: the fee orders were issued as a necessary step to comply with our court’s mandate that receivership fees be awarded and the receivership wound up.17
The closer question, however, is whether the phrase “take steps to accomplish the purposes thereof’ vests us with jurisdiction to review a fee order issued in compliance with an earlier appellate directive to wind-up the receivership. We conclude that it does not.
Turning first to the text of section 1292(a)(2), the statute grants us jurisdiction only over “orders ... refusing orders to wind up receiverships or to take steps to accomplish the purposes thereof, such as directing sales or other disposals of property.” 18 While not a model of clarity, seen in context, there are two ways to read these words. One “interprets] this provision as permitting appeals from orders ‘to take steps to accomplish the purposes [of winding up receiverships],’ ” and the other constructs the language to “permit ] appeals only from orders ‘refusing ... to take steps to accomplish the purposes of [winding up receiverships].”’19 We agree *332with the Ninth Circuit that the latter construction “requires less grammatical torture of the statute” than the former.20 To reach the latter result, we interpret the verb phrase “refusing orders” to modify both the infinitive phrase “to wind up re-ceiverships” and the infinitive phrase “to take steps to accomplish.” The parallel structure of both infinitive phrases suggest that is a reasonable outcome.21 To reach the opposite result, however, we must replace “to take steps” with “taking steps,” a tense change that requires us to change the structure of the statute. Indeed, every circuit to squarely consider this question has reached the same result.22
Second, both our court and our sister circuits have long concluded that orders directing the payment of monies or the transfer of property to receivers and their professionals are unreviewable under section 1292(a)(2).23 We have also refused to find jurisdiction over other orders issued in the course of a receivership, such as authorizing the execution of a lease by a receiver.24 So have our sister circuits.25
Third, as a matter of policy, this interpretation makes good sense. As we recognized in Warren v. Bergeron,26 the imposition of a receivership visits significant consequences: “To put a corporation or other entity into receivership is to wrest management and control from those entrusted by the owners, replacing them’ with a court-appointed trustee under court supervision. Because this action may cause great harm, Congress decided to make interlocutory orders appointing receivers appealable.”27 Orders entered in the normal course of a receivership do not visit such consequences. Moreover, to conclude otherwise would mean that “virtually any order of the receiver within the scope of its jurisdiction would be potentially appealable.”28 Such a piecemeal approach to the appellate process would be disruptive and costly, both to the parties *333and the courts.29
While we believe this textual reading is best, there is one wrinkle, in the form of precedent from our court that could be read to come out the other way. In United States v. “A” Manufacturing Co., Inc., we addressed the question of whether an order by a receiver confirming a sale after the fact is appealable under section 1292(a)(2).30 We said it was, relying mainly on cases interpreting the final-judgment doctrine.31 But in doing so, we used expansive language to describe section 1292(a)(2), saying it “provides for appeals from interlocutory orders which take steps to accomplish the purpose of receiverships such as directing the sale or disposal of property.”32 This language arguably conflicts with the reading of section 1292(a)(2) we have just put forward. Even still, we conclude that this language does not require us to hold we have jurisdiction to review receivership fee orders issued as part of a court-mandated wind-down process.
First, that sentence in “A” Manufacturing is likely dicta. While “[i]t is well-established in this circuit that one panel of this Court may not overrule another,” that rule does not apply to dicta.33
A statement is dictum if it could have been deleted without seriously impairing the analytical foundations of the holding and being peripheral, may not have received the full and careful consideration of the court that uttered it. A statement is not dictum if it is necessary to the result or constitutes an explication of the governing rules of law.34
“A” Manufacturing’s holding—that orders confirming a sale are immediately appeal-able—was based on its interpretation of three cases that, pursuant to an entirely different jurisprudential line, had held that orders confirming sales were immediately appealable.35 That holding was not based on the language of section 1292(a)(2),36 and so “A” Manufacturing’s discussion of that provision could be removed without hin*334dering the analytical basis of its conclusion.
Next, even assuming that “A” Manufacturing’s statement that the courts of appeals have jurisdiction over “interlocutory orders which take steps to accomplish the purpose of receiverships” was holding, that decision conflicts with other, previous panel decisions that held such interlocutory orders were not appealable. In Belleair Hotel Co. v. Mabry, 37 a 1940 decision interpreting an earlier (but nearly identically phrased) version of section 1292(a)(2),38 we concluded that a district court order authorizing a receiver to lease a piece of property was not immediately appealable.39 In doing so,’ we held that:
An examination of the statute just cited discloses no authorization of an appeal from an order of the kind under review. It makes provision for appeals from interlocutory. orders refusing to take appropriate steps to wind up a pending receivership, such as directing a sale or other disposal of the property, but we have no such order before us. In this case, the court has not refused an order to wind up the receivership or to take appropriate steps to that end.40
Similarly, in Wark v. Spinuzzi which also predates “A” Manufacturing, we held that an interlocutory order, “requiring appellants to turn over certain bonds to the Receiver” was not reviewable under section 1292(a)(2).41 The reasoning and holding of both cases, concluding that interlocutory orders which do not refuse orders to wind-down a receivership are not reviewable, conflict with “A” Manufacturing. “The rule in this circuit is :that where two previous holdings or lines of precedent conflict the earlier opinion controls and is the. binding precedent in this circuit.”42
We hold that section 1292(a)(2) does not confer upon us appellate jurisdiction to review these fee orders.
B.
A second potential avenue for appellate jurisdiction is the collateral order doctrine. It does not avail. This rule, which emerged from the Supreme Court’s decision in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corporation, 43 “is best understood not as an exception to the final decision rule laid down by Congress in [28 U.S.C.] § 1291, but as a practical construction of it.”44 “To fall within Cohen’s collateral order'doctrine, ‘an order must (1) conclusively determine the disputed question, (2) resolve an important issue completely separate from the merits of the action, and (3) be effectively unreviewable on appeal from *335a final judgment.’ ”45
The fee orders satisfy the first two Cohen criteria, but not the third. Looking at the first factor, an order is “conclusive” if it is “not subject to later review or revision in the district court. The mere power to revisit an order, however, is insufficient to preclude a finding of conclusivity; it should be unlikely that the district court will revisit the order.”46 By this light, the district court’s fee orders, which did not contemplate revision or modification, are conclusive. The second criteria is whether the fee orders “resolve[ ] an issue completely separate from the merits of the case,”47 or whether they “generally involve[ ] considerations that are ‘enmeshed in the factual and legal issues comprising the plaintiffs cause of action.’ ”48 The orders are adequately separate: the underlying merits of the initial cause of action, a breach of contract dispute, are far removed from the propriety of the fee orders issued as part of a mandated receivership wind-up.
It is on the reviewability element that the orders run aground, a requirement we have “held ... to be the fundamental characteristic of the collateral order doctrine.”49 Here, we look to whether it would be possible to review the fee orders after final judgment has been entered.50 We have not squarely considered the question of whether an order paying receiver fees is effectively reviewable after judgment. We have, however, repeatedly considered whether a district court’s interim (i.e., pre-final judgment) award of attorney’s fees is reviewable under Cohen. It is not, we have “consistently held,” “because the fee award is effectively reviewable after final judgment on the merits of the case is entered.”51 This logic applies equally to receiver fee awards.
While we have announced several exceptions to this pre-final judgment fee rule, none apply here. In Ruiz v. Estelle, for example, we suggested that an award might be reviewable “if the defendant had alleged and proved that the mere payment of the fees would make them unrecoverable.” 52 “Such a situation might arise, for instance, if the fees were to be paid directly to a client in danger of becoming judgment-proof.” 53 It might also arise if awards “will be distributed to potentially thousands of claimants,” leaving the defendant “no practical way of recovering these *336funds should it prevail.”54 Here, by contrast, there are no allegations — and certainly no proof — that the receiver or its counsel would be unable to pay back the awards if Baron prevails. Moreover, there are only a few interested parties; a far cry from the “thousands” of distributed claimants that would make practical recovery an impossibility. We discussed another exception in Walker v. United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.55 There, we reviewed a fee award in the context of a desegregation consent decree, and held that given the “ongoing and possibly permanent nature of monitoring and preventing further changes to the City Consent Decree, it is unlikely that there ever will be a ‘final judgment’ for this court to review.”56 In this case, while the litigation has lingered, we cannot conclude that it will continue on forever.
We hold that that collateral order doctrine does not provide a basis for appellate jurisdiction.
III.
We DISMISS this appeal for want of appellate jurisdiction.