Amid earthquakes and floods, debt crises, plunging markets and political gridlock, Minnesota's biggest companies in 2011 adopted Britain's wartime motto: "Keep calm and carry on."
Sales, profits and employment rose at Minnesota's 100 largest public companies last year as the U.S. economy gained traction.
By year-end, revenue rose 5.3 percent, slightly less than last year's 5.7 percent. Profits jumped nearly 12 percent, a bit below last year's 14 percent gain.
And payrolls gained a relatively strong 4.3 percent, or more than 57,000 jobs. That compares with 2010 when only a net 9,135 jobs were added.
But the collective market value of the state's 100 biggest publicly held firms barely budged from year-ago levels.
"It looks like they followed through on what they said they were going to do last year," said David Vang, professor of finance at the University of St. Thomas' Opus College of Business. "The fundamentals improved. But they did not get rewarded for it."
Several of the bigger Star Tribune 100 companies used these uncertain times as an opportunity to grow. Major deals included:
•Ecolab Inc. of St. Paul (No. 14) bought Nalco Holding Co. of Illinois for more than $5 billion. The deal adds about $4 billion in annual sales and nearly doubles Ecolab's headcount. The cleaning products giant adds Nalco's water treatment, pollution control and energy conservation operations to its cleaning, sanitizing and infection control businesses.