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Just realized a lot of people miss this bearish pattern that shows up pretty regularly on the charts. Let me break down what a reverse cup and handle actually looks like and why traders watch for it.
So basically, you're looking at a pattern that forms after an uptrend has run its course. The reverse cup and handle starts with a sharp drop from the peak, then the price bounces back up but with noticeably less strength. That bounce creates this curved shape that looks like an upside-down cup. Then comes the handle part - the price pulls back slightly but stays weak, never pushing back to test that original peak. This is the key thing to watch.
When I'm analyzing charts, the real signal comes when price breaks below the support level formed by the handle. That's when the bearish reversal actually kicks in. Let me give you practical numbers: imagine price at 100, crashes to 70, then rebounds to 95. That's your inverted cup formation. Then it pulls back to 88 and tries to push to 92 - that's the handle. If it breaks below 88, that's your entry point for shorting.
The profit target works like this - you measure the distance from the cup's top to its bottom, then subtract that length from your breakout point. So in this example, the distance is 30 points (100 minus 70), meaning your target would be around 58 (88 minus 30).
Here's what separates winners from losers with this pattern: volume matters massively. You want to see strong volume on that downside breakout - that's what confirms the pattern is real and not just noise. Also, don't jump the gun trying to short before the handle even completes. Wait for the actual break. And honestly, I always combine this with RSI or moving averages to filter out false signals.
The reverse cup and handle works across all timeframes too. You'll spot it on hourly charts, daily charts, weekly - doesn't matter. The mechanics stay the same. It's basically a textbook bearish reversal that tells you the bulls have lost control and the bears are about to take over. When you see that support line finally break, that's your cue to get short or exit any long positions. Pretty straightforward once you know what to look for.