Bulky-Armament
0xe1ff25d59802920612a4de417b1590e7f4ab55f3
Wallet digest
Activity score
35/100
Performance: thin sample
Open positions
1
Open notional
$0.00
Total PnL
$-8.04
Realised
$0.00
Win rate
n/a
too few closed
Recent activity
- REDEEMWill Floyd Mayweather beat Logan Paul in their boxing exhibition match?$8.04Jun 15, 13:40 UTC
- REDEEMWill the Ethereum 2.0 Genesis Event happen successfully on December 1st, 2020?$0.00Dec 1, 17:35 UTC
- REDEEMWill Mike Tyson win his boxing match against Roy Jones Jr?$0.00Nov 30, 02:10 UTC
- REDEEMWill Jake Paul win his boxing match against Nate Robinson?$14.60Nov 30, 01:44 UTC
- REDEEMWhich party will win Georgia in the 2020 presidential election?$0.00Nov 26, 09:14 UTC
- REDEEMWhich party will win Pennsylvania in the 2020 presidential election?$0.00Nov 26, 09:12 UTC
- REDEEMWhich party will win Pennsylvania in the 2020 presidential election?$0.00Nov 26, 09:12 UTC
Persistent ledger timeline
persistentNo trades for this wallet in Orrery's persistent ledger yet. The whale-ingest cron writes ≥ $5k trades every 10 minutes; check back after a recovery window.
Ledger intelligence
persistent7d volume
$0.00
0 trades
30d volume
$0.00
0 trades
Buy share
50%
Sample
low
0 ledger trades
No persistent whale trades for this wallet yet. The live Data API score above can still be useful, but the durable ledger sample is empty.
Profile dimensions
Trade count + how recently they were active. Low = dormant.
How trustworthy the win-rate number is, based on sample size of closed markets.
Share of trades concentrated in their top category.
Share of positions taken while the market was still uncertain (30–70¢) rather than after direction was obvious.
How risky to blindly copy. Higher = riskier — large size, single-position exposure, or thin win-rate sample.
- Trades (all time)
- 0
- Avg trade size
- $0.00
- Top category
- —
- Category concentration
- 0%
- First seen
- Nov 26, 09:12 UTC
- Last active
- Jun 15, 13:40 UTC
- Win rate sample
- 0 closed
The single Activity score is kept for the leaderboard sort. The five dimensions above are the canonical read — copy-risk bar is inverted so green is always "better for the user".