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The 50 Best One-Year Returns on the S&P 500 (1980-2022)

The Top S&P 500 Stocks by Annual Returns

The average annual return of the S&P 500 was 10% from 1980-2022, excluding dividends. Of course, there are some companies that deliver much higher returns in any given year.

In this graphic using data from S&P Dow Jones Indices, we explore the top S&P 500 stocks with the best single year returns over the last four decades.

Ranking the Top S&P 500 Stocks

In order to find the top gainers, S&P took the top 10 best-performing stocks each year and then narrowed that list down to the top 50 overall. They ranked the top S&P 500 stocks by price returns, meaning that no dividends or stock distributions were included.

The best gains were clustered in a few select years, including the 1999 dot-com boom, the 2003 stock market rally, and the 2009 recovery from the Global Financial Crisis. None of the biggest gains happened in 2021 or 2022.

Rank Company Sector Return Year
1 Qualcomm Information Technology 2620% 1999
2 Tesla Consumer Discretionary 743% 2020
3 DSC Communications Communication Services 468% 1992
4 Coleco Industries Consumer Discretionary 435% 1982
5 Avaya Information Technology 428% 2003
6 Chrysler Consumer Discretionary 426% 1982
7 XL Capital (Axa XL) Financials 395% 2009
8 Tenet Healthcare Healthcare 369% 2009
9 Dynegy Utilities 361% 2000
10 Advanced Micro Devices Information Technology 348% 2009
11 Sprint Communication Services 343% 1999
12 Ford Consumer Discretionary 337% 2009
13 NEXTEL Communications Communication Services 336% 1999
14 LSI Logic Information Technology 319% 1999
15 NVIDIA Information Technology 308% 2001
16 Nortel Networks Communication Services 304% 1999
17 Etsy Consumer Discretionary 302% 2020
18 Genworth Financial Financials 301% 2009
19 Micron Technology Information Technology 300% 2009
20 NetFlix Communication Services 298% 2013
21 Oracle Information Technology 290% 1999
22 Western Digital Information Technology 286% 2009
23 Network Appliance (NetApp) Information Technology 270% 1999
24 Data General Information Technology 267% 1991
25 Yahoo Communication Services 265% 1999
26 Williams Companies Energy 264% 2003
27 Novell Information Technology 264% 1991
28 Dynegy Utilities 263% 2003
29 Sun Microsystems Information Technology 262% 1999
30 PMC-Sierra Information Technology 262% 2003
31 Advanced Micro Devices Information Technology 259% 1991
32 Dell Information Technology 248% 1998
33 Global Marine Energy 247% 1980
34 Micron Technology Information Technology 243% 2013
35 Best Buy Consumer Discretionary 237% 2013
36 Reebok Consumer Discretionary 234% 2000
37 Freeport-McMoRan Materials 229% 2009
38 Biomet (Zimmer Biomet) Healthcare 226% 1991
39 NVIDIA Information Technology 224% 2016
40 Gap Consumer Discretionary 223% 1991
41 NetFlix Communication Services 219% 2010
42 Fleetwood Enterprises (Fleetwood RV) Consumer Discretionary 217% 1982
43 National Semiconductor Information Technology 217% 1999
44 Dell Information Technology 216% 1997
45 Tandy Corp (RadioShack) Information Technology 216% 1980
46 Novell Information Technology 215% 2003
47 Corning Information Technology 215% 2003
48 CB Richard Ellis (CBRE) Real Estate 214% 2009
49 AES Corp Utilities 213% 2003
50 Expedia Consumer Discretionary 212% 2009

Qualcomm was by far the top-performer in any one calendar year window. The company had key patents for Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) technology, which enabled fast wireless internet access and became the basis for 3G networks.

Its stock took off in 1999 as it shed less profitable business lines, resolved a patent dispute with competitor Ericsson, and joined the S&P 500 Index. At the time, CNN reported that one lucky investor who heard about Qualcomm from an investment-banker-turned-rabbi earned $17 million—roughly $30 million in today’s dollars.

The most recent stocks to make the rankings were both from 2020: well-known Tesla (#2) and lesser-known online marketplace Etsy (#17), which saw sales from independent creators surge during the early COVID-19 pandemic. The dollar value of items sold on Etsy more than doubled from $5.3 billion in 2019 to $10.3 billion in 2020, with mask sales accounting for 7% of the total.

Biggest Gainers in Each Sector

While information technology stocks made up nearly half of the list, there is representation from nine of the 11 S&P 500 sectors. No companies from the Industrials or Consumer Staples sectors made it into the ranks of the top S&P 500 stocks by annual returns.

Below, we show the stock with the best annual return for each sector.

Tesla was the top-performing Consumer Discretionary stock on the list. After meeting the requirement of four consecutive quarters of positive earnings, it joined the S&P 500 Index on December 21, 2020. The company’s performance was boosted by the announcement that it would be included in the S&P 500, along with strong performance in China, and general EV buzz as environmental regulations tightened worldwide.

In the realm of Communication Services, DSC Communications saw a sizable return in 1992. The telecommunications equipment company had contracts with major companies such as Bell and Motorola. Alcatel-Lucent (then Alcatel), a French producer of mobile phones, purchased DSC Communications in 1998.

Serial Success Stories

It’s impressive to make the list of the top S&P 500 stocks by calendar returns once, but there are seven companies that have done it twice.

Some stocks saw their repeated outperformance close together, with Dell making the ranks back-to-back in 1997 and 1998.

On the other hand, a select few have more staying power. Computing giant NVIDIA topped the charts in 2001 and triumphed again 15 years later in 2016. And this year might be another win, as the company has recently reached a $1 trillion market capitalization and has the highest year-to-date return in the S&P 500 as of July 6, 2023.

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