May 22, 2026
Whale Watch: Biggest Options Plays This Week
Where institutional money moved May 18–22, 2026
The options market does not lie. It distorts, it hedges, it occasionally bluffs – but when size hits the tape across multiple exchanges in split-second sweeps, something real is happening. This week produced a cluster of notable large-money flows worth walking through carefully.
NVDA: Bears Pay Up Into Earnings Week
The most consistent theme this week was bearish flow in Nvidia despite the stock trading near all-time highs. On May 19, a bearish call sweep crossed at the $225 strike expiring May 22 – 63 contracts at $6.50 per contract, total cost $40,900, split across 3 exchanges. The next session brought another bearish call sweep at the same $225 strike, 52 contracts, $33,500 in total premium. Then on May 21, a neutral-flagged put trade landed – 600 contracts at the $220 strike, also expiring May 22. That is three separate days of downside-leaning flow in the same name. Not a coincidence. For traders watching NVDA, the aggressive use of short-dated calls sold into strength signals that at least one large participant was fading the move near $225.
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ORCL: A Clear Directional Shift
Oracle showed up twice this week, and the contrast is worth noting. On May 18, a bearish call sweep hit the $195 strike expiring May 22 – 100 contracts at $2.58, total premium $25,800. Three days later, the tone completely reversed. A bullish call sweep targeting the $200 strike expiring June 18 crossed for 100 contracts at $11.65 per contract – $116,500 in total premium, split into 6 trades. Open interest at that strike sat at 40,380 contracts, and another 3,665 changed hands that session. The June 18 $200 call sweep is the larger and more deliberate of the two. For traders with a bullish view on ORCL heading into the June expiration cycle, this flow provides context – not instruction.
UAL: Someone Sees $130 by August
United Airlines saw a significant bullish sweep this week – 382 contracts at the $130 strike expiring August 21, 2026. Total premium: $89,400 across 29 trades. What stands out is the open interest context: only 2 open contracts existed at that strike before the trade hit. By end of session, 583 contracts had been bought and sold. That is a fresh position being built at scale, not a hedge unwinding.
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QBTS: Quantum Frenzy, Real Volume
D-Wave Quantum saw call volume running at roughly 5-to-1 calls over puts on May 21, with heavy activity targeting the May 22 $25 strike. Volume on that contract reached 16,522 against open interest of just 1,600 – meaning nearly all of it was new positioning. The catalyst: a Wall Street Journal report that the Trump administration is taking minority stakes in nine quantum computing companies, including D-Wave. Flow followed news here. That matters for how you weight it.
DOCN: Long-Dated Bear Bet
DigitalOcean attracted a bearish put sweep with real conviction behind it. 54 contracts at the $67.50 strike expiring January 21, 2028 – 611 days out. Total premium: $64,100. Split into 7 trades. This is not a short-term hedge. Someone is structuring defined downside exposure in DOCN over a nearly two-year window. That time horizon alone separates it from the noise.
This week’s flow breaks down across three themes: bearish positioning in high-flying tech (NVDA), a directional shift building in enterprise software (ORCL), and fresh long-dated conviction trades in industrials and cloud (UAL, DOCN). The QBTS activity is real in size but news-driven – a different animal than the others.
None of this constitutes a trade recommendation. Unusual options activity can reflect hedging, institutional rebalancing, or speculative positioning – and distinguishing between them requires context beyond the flow alone. What it does offer is a map of where large capital is moving, and that is worth paying attention to.
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– The Editorial Desk
