#Giant Whale loses $630,000.#

60
2
Posts
Hot Topic Details

Hot Topic Overview

Overview

Recently, a whale who has made over $10 million in the Solana ecosystem lost 298 SOL (about $634,000) due to accidentally buying the wrong token. The whale had been making significant profits since December 20th by buying tokens like swarms, ZAILGO, and mcs. However, 40 minutes ago, the whale accidentally bought autospores, realized the mistake, and quickly sold it to buy spores, resulting in the loss.

Ace Hot Topic Analysis

小 A

Analysis

A whale who made over $10 million on the cryptocurrency trading platform swarms lost 298 SOL (about $634,000) due to accidentally buying the wrong token. Since December 20th, the whale bought 58.95 million swarms at an average price of $0.038, making a profit of $10.25 million; bought 29.52 million ZAILGO at an average price of $0.024, making a profit of $1.96 million; and bought 80.84 million mcs at an average price of $0.0052, making a profit of $549,000. However, 40 minutes ago, the whale spent 325 SOL ($69,000) to buy autospores, only to find out it was the wrong token. He quickly sold all autospores and bought spores instead, losing 298 SOL ($634,000). This incident serves as a reminder for investors to be cautious when trading and avoid similar mistakes.

Related Currencies

Public Sentiment

0%
100%

Discussion Word Cloud

Classic Views

A whale lost $634,000 in a trade due to buying the wrong token, reminding investors to be cautious and carefully verify token information when trading.

1

Despite the whale making over $10 million in profits on swarms, this mistake also shows that even experienced traders can make mistakes.

2

The whale's mistake may be related to the trading platform's interface design or the similarity of token names, or it may be related to the trader's own negligence.

3

This event has also raised concerns about the security and user experience of trading platforms. Platforms should provide clearer token information and a more user-friendly trading interface to reduce the occurrence of similar events.

4