Nvidia’s Recovery and Historical Price Patterns
We are seeing Nvidia Corp. recover after a corrective pullback found support in the $220-$225 range, which was an area where we expected buyers to appear. The stock has since reacted positively, and this bounce confirms our view that the dip was a buying opportunity. This pattern is consistent with previous consolidations, like the one we saw in the spring of 2024, which preceded a major move higher.Volatility Trends and Trading Strategies
For traders, the recent spike in implied volatility during the sell-off has now begun to decrease as the stock stabilizes. The 30-day implied volatility has fallen from over 50% last week to a more stable 42%, making option premiums slightly less expensive. This shift suggests that market anxiety is easing and the immediate panic has likely passed. Traders who bought call options near the recent lows should now look to manage those positions by taking partial profits or rolling them to a higher strike price. With volatility contracting, it is a good time to consider initiating new bullish positions. We see opportunities in buying call debit spreads to target a move back toward the all-time highs near $260. Given the strong rebound from support, we also view selling out-of-the-money put credit spreads as an attractive strategy. Collecting premium on puts with strike prices below the $220 support level allows traders to capitalize on both the upward drift and the decline in volatility. The CBOE put/call ratio for Nvidia has also declined from 1.1 to 0.85 in the past week, indicating a shift from fear back to a more bullish sentiment. The broader uptrend remains firmly in place as long as the stock holds above the key $205 level, which marks the lows from the first quarter of 2026. This level serves as our main invalidation point for the current bullish structure. Any weakness that holds above this zone should still be considered a buying opportunity.Start trading now — click here to create your real VT Markets account.