Wall St back at Square One, with S&P flat in 2011

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – For the U.S. stock  market, 2011 was a long wild ride to nowhere.

The broad S&P 500 endured huge daily swings but a year of  drama left the index almost where it started. It lost a mere  0.003 percent, closest to unchanged since 1947, according to  Standard & Poor’s.

Global markets have been battered this year by the euro-zone  debt crisis, upheaval in the Middle East, and U.S. political  gridlock. Similar events probably await investors in 20
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“The earnings and fundamentals were there for companies, but  the political crisis and paralysis in Washington and Europe were  too much,” said Martin Sass, who founded and runs the $7.5  billion M.D. Sass hedge fund.

“They overwhelmed the fundamentals. I didn’t think the euro-  zone crisis would have been so protracted as it has become.”    The Dow industrials gained 5.5 percent for the year as  investors sought safety in large-cap, dividend-paying stocks.  The Nasdaq lost 1.8 percent.

Investors took out their ire on the financials, which were  the weakest group this year, falling more than 18 percent.  Concerns about exposure to Europe and the threat of a renewed  financial crisis hurt those shares.

Bank of America Corp was the Dow’s worst performer, tumbling  58.3 percent this year, and it was also one of the S&P 500’s  biggest losers. JPMorgan Chase & Co slumped 21.6 percent in  2011.

Cabot Oil & Gas Corp was the only S&P component to double  its stock price in 2011 – rising 100.5 percent – followed by  another energy name, El Paso Corp, which rose 93.1 percent. The  S&P 500 ‘s weakest stock was First Solar, as shares of that  company were hit by falling solar panel prices. For the year,  the stock was off 74.1 percent.

Defensive sectors like utilities outperformed growth  sectors, underscoring the view that investors were concerned  about the economic outlook.

McDonald’s Corp advanced 31 percent this year, making it the  Dow’s biggest gainer.

Reflecting the wild market swings, the CBOE Volatility  Index, or VIX, rose about 32 percent for the year, the first  increase since 2008. The S&P 500 climbed 9 percent at its peak,  and dropped 14.5 percent to its bottom.

One potential silver lining headed into 2012 is that after  relatively flat years, the market tends to bounce.