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Just spotted something worth discussing in the charts. The inverse cup and handle pattern is one of those technical setups that can really signal a major shift coming, and honestly, if you're not watching for it, you might miss some solid exit opportunities.
So here's how this plays out. Picture an uptrend that's been running, then suddenly the price gets smacked down hard—that's your cup forming. After that initial drop, there's a weak rebound attempt, but it doesn't quite make it back to where it started. That's the tricky part. Most traders get fooled here thinking momentum is returning, but the inverse cup and handle tells a different story.
Then comes the handle phase. The price tries to climb again but it's lackluster, right? It might touch $95 after dropping to $70, but when it pulls back to $88 and only recovers to $92, you can see the weakness building. The pattern isn't complete until that support level breaks. That's your signal.
What makes this inverse cup and handle setup so reliable is the breakdown moment. Once the price punches below the support line of that handle, that's when the real downtrend kicks in. I've found the best entry is right at that breakdown, not before. Patience matters here.
For targeting, take the distance from the cup top to the cup bottom, then measure that same length downward from the breakout point. That's roughly where you can expect price to reach. And always—I mean always—put your stop loss just above the handle. You don't want to get caught holding through a false breakdown.
A few things to keep in mind: volume should spike on that breakdown, that's your confirmation that it's real selling pressure, not just noise. Don't jump the gun either. Wait for the pattern to fully form before you act. And yeah, combining this with RSI or moving averages can really strengthen your conviction.
The inverse cup and handle boils down to this—you've got a weakening uptrend, a failed rebound attempt, and then a clear breakdown. That combination is basically the market saying 'we're done going up.' It's a strong signal to get defensive or take profits. Use it right and you can catch some solid moves before the crowd realizes what's happening.