Top trades to watch as oil tumbles and AI reclaims the tape
US stocks pushed higher on Monday, helped by a sharp slide in crude. Brent dropped almost 10% after Iran said the Strait of Hormuz was fully open to traffic, which cooled the latest supply anxiety. As a result, traders covered energy shorts, chased big tech and leaned into anything with clean AI momentum.
Meanwhile, the day’s best setups were not subtle. Netflix drew heavy dip buying after a bruising selloff. Marvell kept sprinting to fresh highs as the AI data centre trade tightened its grip. Rare earths lit up on deal headlines, while energy screens flashed oversold readings that mean reversion traders love, if geopolitics stays quiet for five minutes.
Netflix: dip buyers are noisy, and the options tape agrees
NFLX fell about 10% after guidance disappointed, yet the options market responded like it smelled blood in the water. Volume ran to roughly 724,730 contracts, about nine times normal, with calls outpacing puts by about 2 to 1. That mix often signals traders hunting a rebound rather than hedging a further slide.
However, this is not a charity bid. Bears will argue that streaming growth is no longer scarce, therefore the multiple must compress. Bulls will point out that the stock has a habit of snapping back when broader indices hold firm and implied volatility stays elevated. If the market keeps its bid, NFLX starts to look like a mean reversion swing, not a broken story.
Marvell: AI momentum keeps paying, even at 52 week highs
MRVL printed a new 52 week high, up $5.58 to $138.95, as traders piled into AI infrastructure names again. Semis led because the market still treats data centre spend as non discretionary, even when other growth pockets wobble. Whispers around partnerships, including chatter tied to Google, helped, although price action did the real persuading.
Analyst targets remain scattered, with numbers cited from $60 to $135, which tells you the Street is still arguing about the right framework. Nevertheless, price is the arbiter in momentum tape, and this chart keeps forcing shorts to back away. If semis stay hot, momentum buyers will likely treat pullbacks as entries rather than warnings.
Rare earths: deal heat pulls in fast money
USA Rare Earth surged after announcing a $2.8 billion deal for Serra Verde. The critical minerals theme already had traders on edge, so the acquisition acted like a match in dry grass. Options activity reportedly ran about 15 times average, and calls swamped puts by roughly 7 to 1, which is classic speculative chasing.
Meanwhile, peer moves added oxygen. Critical Metals jumped about 40% to $13.03 after boosting its stake in Greenland’s Tanbreez project, often described as a heavyweight heavy rare earth asset. The read across is simple. If deal headlines keep coming, flows can overwhelm fundamentals for days at a time.
Energy: oversold does not mean safe, but it does mean tradable
Crude’s plunge flattened energy names and pushed several into oversold territory. Screens flagged RSI readings below 30 in names like BTU, PDS and RUBI, which invites bounce hunters. However, oversold setups work best when the macro driver stops moving, therefore this trade depends on calm headlines out of the Gulf.
If oil stabilises after the Strait news, energy could stage a sharp snapback because positioning shifted fast. If headlines reverse, stops will matter more than conviction.
AI infrastructure: Oracle steadies, CoreWeave stays wild
ORCL continues to benefit from the market’s view that non hyperscaler AI demand is real and sticky. Traders keep pointing to its $550 billion backlog as a cushion, especially when the tape rotates between software and semis. Pullbacks have tended to attract buyers looking for less volatile AI exposure.
By contrast, CoreWeave remains a high beta proxy for the AI buildout. It has already surged hard, including a big April move, and daily volume has stayed elevated, with prints cited near 23 million shares. That makes it attractive for momentum continuations, but painful to hold through reversals.
Earnings volatility: GE sets up the classic options trade
GE heads into results with expectations around $1.60 in EPS and $10.72 billion in revenue. A pre earnings run often inflates implied volatility, therefore straddles and strangles can make sense for traders who want movement rather than direction. Directional traders will watch whether industrial strength can keep up with a tech led tape.
By the numbers
- Brent: down nearly 10% after Strait of Hormuz traffic reassurance
- NFLX options: about 724,730 contracts, roughly 9x average, calls about 2:1 vs puts
- MRVL: $138.95, up $5.58, fresh 52 week high
- USAR deal: $2.8 billion Serra Verde acquisition
- GE expectations: EPS $1.60, revenue $10.72 billion
Key takeaways for traders
- NFLX: watch for a rebound if the index tone stays firm and implied volatility remains bid
- MRVL: momentum remains intact, therefore treat pullbacks as the real decision points
- Rare earths: deal flow can drive outsized moves, so size small and expect gaps
- Energy: oversold bounces look clean on charts, but headlines can invalidate them quickly
- GE: options traders can target volatility itself, especially after a pre earnings run

