Joji traded like a focused scalper in the last 30 days, with 20 trades across just 3 tokens. Average holding time was 480 seconds, which points to short-duration execution rather than longer swing positioning. The activity was concentrated, not broad, with capital rotated through a small set of names instead of spread across many bets. Total buy volume came in at 4768.11 dollars and total sell volume at 3910.55 dollars, reinforcing that this wallet was actively in and out of positions but within a narrow token universe.
Recent performance was negative overall. This wallet posted -857.56 dollars in PnL with an ROI of -17.99% over the period. The win rate was 33.33%, so only about one out of three trades ended positive. That profile suggests Joji relied on a limited number of successful trades to offset losses, but the winners were not enough to carry the month. For copy traders, the key point is that the strategy showed speed and concentration, but the recent numbers did not convert that into consistent profitability.
The clearest positive came from J7CS…, which generated 1275.42 dollars across 11 trades and stood out as the best-performing token. Losses were led by 4GaV…, down -1261.64 dollars in just 2 trades, while DJwF… added another -871.34 dollars across 7 trades. Those token-level results show how dependent the wallet was on one successful name, while the other two dragged overall performance into the red. With only 3 unique tokens traded, each decision had a meaningful impact on the final outcome.
This wallet is best suited for traders who specifically want to follow a high-conviction, short-hold approach and are comfortable with concentrated token exposure. Joji may appeal to users looking for quick trade turnover rather than diversified positioning. At the same time, the recent -17.99% ROI, 33.33% win rate, and losses in 2 of 3 traded tokens suggest this is not a profile for someone seeking steady hit rates or broad diversification.
