A stationary state is not a standing wave.

The wave function stat com closest to the deBroglie picture are "circular orbitals", states with large principal quantum number $n$, maximum value of angular momentum $\ell$. When then $m_\ell = \pm \ell$, the phase of the wave function varies only as a function of the angle in the plane of the orbital. Here an image for $n=6$ where phase is coded as color:

[![enter image description here][1]][1]

This is the time-independent part of the wave function. To get the time-dependent wave function, one multiplies with the phase factor $e^{iEt/\hbar}$. This adds a phase that grows with time, so that the colors rotate.

A standing wave would be a sum of the clockwise and the anti-clockwise pattern, $m_\ell = \ell$ and $m_\ell = - \ell$


  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/Afw29.png