Qualcomm’s 1999 Cup‑With‑Handle Parabolic Run
June 9, 2026 at 08:04 UTC
Qualcomm (QCOM) in the late 1990s provides a textbook example of how a large, well‑structured base can precede an extreme momentum move. After flawed early bases in 1997 and early 1998, the stock formed a substantial cup‑with‑handle pattern from mid‑1998 to mid‑1999, with price consolidating around the high single digits before breaking out near the $20–$25 zone on rising weekly volume.
From there, QCOM transitioned into a leadership role, climbing from roughly $7 to above $180 in about a year, adjusted for stock splits. The advance featured repeated high‑volume weeks that aligned with labeled buy and add zones, including a high‑tight‑flag style consolidation around the mid‑rally region near $100. Volume bars in the 20 million to 80 million share range underscored heavy institutional participation as the dot‑com and telecom boom drove a speculative re‑rating of Qualcomm’s (QCOM) CDMA and wireless IP royalty story.
The late stage of the move saw the stock accelerate from around $100 toward the $190–$200 area within roughly three weeks, a near‑vertical surge consistent with a classic climactic finale after an already extended run. Beneath the price action, a sequence of annotated percentage gains, often in the triple‑digit range over successive quarters, highlighted how a single, large cup‑with‑handle base can precede multiple compounding advances. Historical analysis of this episode is frequently used to illustrate how institutional accumulation, improving fundamentals, and a momentum‑driven feedback loop can combine to produce parabolic outcomes, along with significant post‑peak risk once speculative excess reaches its peak.
Terminology
- Cup-With-Handle: Bullish chart pattern featuring a rounded base followed by a shorter pullback handle.
- High-Tight-Flag: Short, steep consolidation after a rapid price surge, often preceding further momentum moves.
Get premium market insights delivered directly to your inbox.