GVQ looks like a focused swing trader rather than a high-frequency scalper. Over the last 30 days, this wallet traded 5 unique tokens across 22 trades, with an average holding time of 202065 seconds. Activity was concentrated, not broad, which fits a selective style but also increases dependence on a few outcomes. The wallet’s labels match the data: focused positioning with multi-day holds, instead of rapid rotation across many names.
Recent performance was weak. GVQ posted -$337.15 in PnL on $693.55 of total buys and $314.77 of total sells, for a -48.61% ROI over the period. The win rate was 20%, which means only a small share of trades closed profitably. For copy traders, that combination matters more than trade count alone: the wallet stayed active enough to show a pattern, but the pattern in this window was negative. The low win rate and steep ROI drawdown suggest entries or exits did not work well during this stretch.
The biggest positive contributor was 9rHa…, which returned +$94.95 across 5 trades. That shows GVQ can capture upside on selected positions, but the gains were not enough to offset larger losses elsewhere. The biggest drag was FjSg…, down -$200.33 over 8 trades, making it both the worst token and the most traded name. Other losses came from 41XK… at -$101.77 over 5 trades, 49xi… at -$74.89 on 1 trade, and FWBJ… at -$55.12 over 3 trades. This distribution suggests the wallet did not suffer from one isolated mistake alone; several positions underperformed.
This wallet would mainly suit someone specifically looking to mirror a concentrated swing-trading approach and who is comfortable with uneven results across a small token set. GVQ may appeal more to traders who want exposure to a known KOL wallet with clear conviction sizing by attention, not to someone seeking stable hit rates or broad diversification. Based on this 30-day sample, copy traders would need tolerance for drawdowns, low win rates, and reliance on a limited number of positions to turn performance around.
