Rounding Bottom Pattern on NSE (Educational)
A rounding bottom (saucer) describes a gradual transition from downtrend to uptrend—a long, smooth base rather than a sharp V-reversal. Textbooks use it to illustrate slow supply exhaustion.
Swing Edge does not provide investment advice or trade instructions. Patterns and levels here are for education and research — you decide any action in the market.
Saucer Anatomy
The left rim marks the end of the prior decline; the bowl is a long, curved bottom; the right rim is where price returns to prior resistance.
Duration is often measured in months—patience is part of the narrative in reversal coursework.
Volume sometimes fades through the bowl and rises toward the right rim, but patterns vary.
Rounding Bottom Scanner
Swing Edge runs a dedicated Rounding Bottom screener that scores rim level, trough duration, symmetry and participation.
Cross-check with Base Formation names if the saucer is still below a defined pivot.
False Starts
Premature rim breaks without volume can fail; our scoring penalises weak participation.
Macro bear markets can delay or abort saucer completions across many symbols at once.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a rounding bottom?
A long, U-shaped base suggesting gradual shift from supply to demand—also called a saucer bottom.
Rounding bottom vs cup-and-handle?
Saucers are often longer reversal bases; cups are usually continuation structures after existing strength.
Where are live saucer candidates?
On the Rounding Bottom screener after the nightly scan.
Is this investment advice?
No—educational pattern context and scanner output for your own research.