A single on-chain wallet closed out more than three months of Ethereum swing trading with a $1.48 million loss. Address 0x8062 started deploying capital on February 2, moving 4.38 million USDT into ETH. Three months later, the wallet sold its remaining position and was left holding roughly 3.4 million USDT — a drawdown of around 33% on deployed capital.
The trade reads as a textbook case of getting chopped up in a range-bound market: a swing trader with meaningful capital, a multi-month holding window, and a loss large enough to make the on-chain record books. It is also a reminder that the wallets most visible on-chain are not always the most skilled — surviving long enough to post a final PnL is itself a low bar.
For readers, the lesson is less about Ethereum's direction and more about the cost of active trading in a sideways tape. Time in the trade, not direction, did most of the damage.
Frequently asked questions
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Who is the trader that lost $1.48M on ETH?
On-chain address 0x8062. The wallet started deploying capital into ETH on February 2 and exited this week after more than three months of swing trading.
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How much did the trader lose in percentage terms?
Roughly 33% on deployed capital. The wallet started with 4.38 million USDT and exited with around 3.4 million USDT.
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What is the trader's ETH entry and exit window?
Entry was February 2. The wallet sold its remaining ETH holdings this week, a holding period of just over three months.
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Does this loss signal a broader ETH market direction?
No. A single wallet's capitulation is anecdotal and tells you little about broader market structure. The story is illustrative of chop, not predictive of price.
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Why is this story circulating in the first place?
The loss is large enough and the on-chain footprint visible enough that automated wallet trackers flagged the final exit. The post is a record of the trade, not a market call.
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