The setups that look strongest heading into the week of April 20

The market is entering one of those stretches where seasonality and narrative start to work together.

On one hand, Q1 earnings season is beginning to take center stage, which often means traders start rotating into stocks where expectations, sentiment, and timing line up just right. On the other hand, this is also the point in the calendar where certain names begin to benefit from specific business drivers: tax-season urgency, AI infrastructure spending, or rising attention on power demand as warmer weather approaches.

A conceptual visualization of a dynamic market environment where swirling data flows representing seasonality and earnings merge into distinct, upward-trending pathways, with a central person navigating.

That matters because in this kind of market, you do not just want “good companies.”
You want good companies with a reason to move now.

From this week’s seasonal list, these are the top 3 names that stand out most.

1) Intuit (INTU)

Why it stands out: strong seasonal win rate + a very clear calendar catalyst

Seasonal profile:

  • Frequency higher: 87.9%
  • Profit factor: 5.51
  • Annualized return: 45.1%

This is one of the cleanest seasonal stories on the board.

Why? Because Intuit is tied to a very real calendar event that regular traders can understand immediately: tax season. April is not just another month for this company. It is the final stretch where urgency peaks, filing activity intensifies, and the market starts looking ahead to what that could mean for product engagement, monetization, and guidance.

An illustrative financial scene inside a vault, where a detailed mechanical calendar dial points to 'APRIL' and transitions into a radiant AI chatbot assisting with stylized tax forms.

There’s also a business tailwind behind it. Monster reported fourth-quarter 2025 net sales of $2.13 billion, up 17.6% year over year, showing the brand still has real momentum behind it.

Why this one stands out:
Because it has both the numbers and the narrative. Traders love seasonality, but the best seasonal setups are the ones you can explain in one sentence. In this case: warmer weather tends to support stronger beverage demand, and Monster already has the operating momentum to capitalize on it.

The simple takeaway:
This is a seasonal setup backed by a real-world calendar trigger, not just a chart pattern.

2) Synopsys (SNPS)

Why it stands out: elite seasonal stats + direct exposure to the AI infrastructure buildout

Seasonal profile:

  • Frequency higher: 85.3%
  • Profit factor: 52.84
  • Annualized return: 78.9%

These are standout numbers.

Synopsys may not be a household name for beginner traders, but the business sits right in the middle of one of the biggest themes in the market: the global push to build more advanced chips and AI systems.

When chip demand rises, when hyperscalers spend aggressively, and when design complexity increases, Synopsys tends to benefit because it provides the software tools used to design and validate those chips. In plain English: if the AI boom keeps driving more semiconductor investment, Synopsys is one of the businesses helping make it possible.

A detailed visualization inside a financial server vault, showing a colossal, intricately designed semiconductor chip being meticulously generated and optimized by sophisticated golden software tools and algorithms.

That is what makes this setup attractive. It offers AI exposure, but in a more grounded, “picks-and-shovels” way than the typical headline-grabbing names.

The simple takeaway:
This is not just AI hype. It is an infrastructure play with one of the strongest seasonal profiles in the group.

3) NRG Energy (NRG)

Why it stands out: solid seasonal pattern + a timely power-demand story

Seasonal profile:

  • Frequency higher: 81.8%
  • Profit factor: 5.60
  • Annualized return: 39.6%

NRG gives this list a different kind of setup, which is part of what makes it interesting.

As the market moves deeper into late spring, power demand starts getting more attention. Warmer weather is around the corner, and that often brings utilities and power-related names back into focus. But this year there is another angle: investors are paying closer attention to electricity demand tied to AI data centers, grid strain, and long-term infrastructure needs.

That gives NRG a timely story without making it feel like a speculative trade. It is not a vague AI bet. It is a more grounded name that fits into the broader conversation around rising energy demand and dependable cash flow.

A cinematic scene within a massive financial grid facility, where energy flows glowing with green and golden light are directed towards stylized power infrastructure and a prominent, futuristic AI data center.

For retail traders, that is an important distinction. Sometimes the best setups are not the loudest names in the market. Sometimes they are the ones where the seasonal trend and the bigger macro story quietly line up.

The simple takeaway:
NRG offers a seasonal setup with a simple, timely narrative: rising attention on electricity demand at exactly the right point in the calendar.

This Week’s Bottom Line

If the goal is to find the best mix of:

  • strong historical seasonality,
  • understandable business drivers,
  • and a believable reason for traders to care right now,

then these are the three names that rise to the top:

  1. INTU — tax season + AI-enabled financial tools
  2. SNPS — AI infrastructure spend + elite seasonal stats
  3. NRG — power demand + infrastructure narrative

If you want the exact trade management and timing details, log in to SuperSeasonal.com for the full seasonal window.

Trade well,
Chad Shirley

A conceptual 3D visualization inside a financial vault, showing three distinct glowing platforms for Intuit, Synopsys, and NRG, merging into a single, unified, strong foundation, representing strong historical seasonality and believable drivers.

Risk Disclaimer: Trading and investing involve risk, and losses can exceed initial capital. This report is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Past performance and seasonal trends do not guarantee future results.