bilo trades like a true short-horizon Solana scalper. Over the last 30 days, this wallet logged 207 trades across 35 unique tokens, with an average holding time of 1,971 seconds. That combination points to fast rotation, frequent entries, and a willingness to spread activity across many names rather than concentrate on a small watchlist. The 45.71% win rate is below half, so the profile is not built on constant accuracy. Instead, the edge appears to come from keeping losses contained often enough while extracting larger gains from selected moves. Total buy volume was 8,595.49 dollars versus 8,465.84 dollars sold, reinforcing the impression of active, high-volume recycling rather than passive holding.
Performance for the period came in at 687.44 dollars in profit, equal to 8% ROI. For a wallet with this many trades, that result suggests a strategy that can stay net positive even without a dominant win rate. Activity was not evenly distributed: Cali alone accounted for 77 trades and 599.03 dollars in profit, while 4TWm… added 186.15 dollars over 32 trades. Several smaller two-trade winners also contributed, including WfjT… at 398.89 dollars, 9c7W… at 389.93 dollars, GTxv… at 131.14 dollars, bvSH… at 122.32 dollars, 7AjX… at 116.88 dollars, and 4ENT… at 90.56 dollars. The pattern suggests bilo can identify short bursts of momentum, but results depend on repeated execution.
The standout win was clearly Cali at 599.03 dollars, which did a lot of the heavy lifting. WfjT… and 9c7W… were also meaningful contributors despite only two trades each, showing that a few well-timed positions can materially shape overall returns. On the downside, the biggest drag was HKhU… at minus 453 dollars from four trades. Additional losses came from 7kqK… at minus 267.63 dollars over 18 trades, 9xWa… at minus 136.52 dollars over seven trades, and 5rJY… at minus 97.41 dollars over three trades. That mix shows both single-name downside risk and the possibility of grinding losses through repeated attempts.
This wallet best fits traders looking to follow an active scalper who operates frequently and holds briefly. It is more suitable for people comfortable with fast turnover, uneven hit rate dynamics, and performance that can be heavily influenced by a few tokens. Traders expecting slow accumulation or longer holding periods may find bilo’s style too rapid and too dependent on timely execution.
