Zil traded like a position-oriented Solana wallet over the last 30 days, with 199 trades across 30 unique tokens and an average holding time of 1,143,926 seconds. That points to a style that is more patient than pure scalping, while still active enough to rotate through a broad set of names. The wallet posted $3,897.35 in total PnL on a 24% ROI, with a 50% win rate. Based on the mix of turnover and holding time, this wallet appears to balance conviction holds with frequent trade management rather than relying on a very small number of entries.
The recent performance profile is solid but not overly concentrated in one single trade. Zil bought $16,238.29 and sold $19,363.67 over the period, producing the net gain of $3,897.35. A 50% win rate suggests the edge came from payoff size and trade selection rather than simply winning most trades. Activity was spread across many tokens, which can reduce dependence on one theme, though it also means followers would need to track a fairly busy wallet. The position-trader label also fits the observed holding period better than a fast in-and-out momentum approach.
The strongest realized contribution came from HQCY… at $1,242.22 over 17 trades, followed by 74Yo… at $966.03 across 28 trades, GrHT… at $838.70 across 21 trades, and 8DTQ… at $668.91 across 17 trades. Other positive contributors included GEyi… at $572.13 in just 3 trades and FJEM… at $571.55 over 15 trades, showing that both lower-frequency and more active names worked for this wallet. On the downside, the largest loss was 9w29… at -$493.62 from 1 trade, with another notable drag from 575b… at -$370.90 across 7 trades. That distribution suggests gains were built from several medium-to-strong winners rather than one outlier alone.
This wallet is best suited to traders who want exposure to an active Solana participant with a position-trading bias, moderate diversification, and enough volume to generate a meaningful sample size in a 30-day window. Zil may appeal more to copiers who are comfortable following many token rotations and waiting through longer holds, rather than those looking for ultra-short-term entries or a very high win-rate profile.
