Red trades like a fast, highly active Solana day-trader with broad token coverage and quick turnover. Over the last 30 days, this wallet logged 780 trades across 50 unique tokens, which points to a high-volume style rather than concentrated conviction bets. The average holding time was 4,140 seconds, so positions were typically opened and closed within a short window. Based on the mix of volume, diversification, and brief holds, this wallet appears focused on capturing short-term momentum and rotating capital quickly rather than sitting in longer swings.
The recent performance is exceptionally strong on the numbers provided. Red produced $27,249.56 in PnL on $19,703.58 of total buys and $46,953.14 of total sells, for a 138.3% ROI over the last 30 days. The reported win rate is 100%, which is unusual at this activity level and stands out given the 780-trade sample. That combination suggests highly disciplined execution, favorable market timing, or both. The wallet also maintained this result while spreading activity over 50 tokens, which indicates that returns were not dependent on just one isolated position, even though a few names contributed more than others.
The biggest gain came from Chuck at $8,190.96 across 41 trades, clearly the standout winner in the set. Other notable contributors were Community with $1,785.00 over 38 trades, FARM with $1,084.02 over 83 trades, BabyTrump with $988.36 over 27 trades, and HelloWorld! with $927.90 over 28 trades. LEELOO added $844.67 across 16 trades, Feetcoin added $684.32 across 12 trades, and Allan added $660.98 across 15 trades. The weakest token listed was QSHIT, but it still showed a positive $145.78, reinforcing how consistently profitable the recent activity was.
This wallet best fits copy-traders looking for a rapid, diversified, short-hold style with frequent entries and exits. Red may appeal to traders who want exposure to many smaller opportunities instead of waiting on a few large setups. It is less suited to investors who prefer low turnover, long holding periods, or simple portfolios with only a handful of positions.
