Paper looks like a focused position trader rather than a high-frequency wallet. Over the last 30 days, this wallet traded 21 times across just 4 tokens, which suggests selective exposure instead of broad rotation. The average holding time was 910811 seconds, reinforcing a slower pace and a willingness to sit in positions. With labels pointing to a position-trader and focused approach, Paper appears to concentrate capital into a small set of names and let outcomes play out over time.
Recent performance was modestly positive. Paper posted $11.61 in total PnL with a 1.26% ROI over the period. Total buys reached $919.72, while total sells came in at $762.47. The win rate was 50%, so half of trades closed profitably, but the overall return stayed close to flat. That combination suggests mixed execution: enough winners to offset losses, though not by a wide margin. The small token count also means each position had a meaningful impact on the final result.
The strongest contributor was 7E1y… with $190.15 in PnL across 10 trades, making it the clearest driver of gains. D9ms… added another $62.93 over 4 trades. On the losing side, Ad6d… lost $180.2 across 4 trades, nearly canceling the best winner on its own. 9cRC… also detracted $61.27 over 3 trades. The spread between the best and worst tokens shows that Paper can find profitable setups, but concentration risk is noticeable when one weak position erases much of the upside created elsewhere.
This wallet may suit copy traders who prefer concentrated exposure, lower trade frequency, and longer holding periods over constant churn. Paper is not operating like a broad scanner across many assets, so anyone following this wallet would be aligning with a narrower, conviction-style approach. It may fit traders who are comfortable with a 50% win rate and understand that a small number of token choices can heavily shape results in either direction.
