all collections · daily · marketplace overlay
weekly · real (teal) vs wash (rose)
all collections · daily · marketplace overlay
weekly · real (teal) vs wash (rose)
counterparties · funders · clusters
Move packages this wallet published on-chain — what it shipped, not what it used.
This package defines four public functions (ma, mb, mma, mmb) that facilitate flash swaps on a liquidity pool. The primary object type managed is a generic Pool<Ty0, Ty1>, which represents a liquidity pool for two token types. The public functions ma and mma perform a flash swap where a user borrows Ty0 tokens and repays with Ty1 tokens, while mb and mmb perform the inverse, borrowing Ty1 and repaying with Ty0. All functions mutate the provided Pool object by calling external pool::flash_swap and pool::repay_flash_swap functions. The ma and mb functions interact with a GlobalConfig object, while mma and mmb interact with a Version object and a TxContext. There are no explicit signature/allowlist gating, time-gating, dynamic fields, admin caps, vault/escrow, or royalties evident in the provided IR.
This package defines functions for interacting with a lending market, primarily for liquidation. The main object types are `LendingMarket`, `Coin`, `Balance`, `Clock`, `ID`, `RateLimiterExemption`, `LiquidityRequest`, `PriceOracle`, `Storage`, `Pool`, `Incentive`, `SuiSystemState`, and `TxContext`. The `dispose_residue` function handles leftover coins by transferring them to the sender if their value is greater than zero, otherwise destroying them. The `sl` public function liquidates a position in the lending market, redeeming cTokens and withdrawing liquidity, returning a `Balance<Ty2>`. The `sls` public function performs a similar liquidation but specifically for SUI, involving unstaking SUI from a staker and fulfilling a liquidity request, returning a `Balance<SUI>`. The `nl` public function calls an incentive_v3 liquidation function, returning a `Balance<Ty1>`. Notable patterns include the use of generic types for different coin types and the interaction with external modules like `
Where this wallet's SUI first came from, and what it seeded downstream. Observational: a CEX funder suggests a real/retail origin; a high-fanout non-CEX funder is a signal worth noting — not proof of anything.
{
"wallet": "0xfc2e0085bb1e35f80e5cd2b99c7dd1fcb99f126d3dc92c3570b7cf0601b24b08",
"n_tx": 415,
"n_successful_tx": 412,
"n_distinct_epochs": 143,
"n_distinct_sponsors": 1,
"first_seen_cp": 71865802,
"last_seen_cp": 216256288,
"first_seen_ts_ms": 1729650828909,
"last_seen_ts_ms": 1764128036891,
"total_gas_spent_mist": -8751503820,
"n_self_sponsored_tx": 414,
"n_sponsored_tx": 1,
"gas_price_p50": 740,
"gas_price_p95": 750,
"active_hours_top24": [
1,
0,
3,
2,
4,
23,
22,
16,
7,
6,
17,
9,
13,
10,
8,
15,
5,
21,
18,
19,
14,
12,
11
],
"primary_archetype": null,
"labels": [],
"label_confidence": [],
"bot_score": 0,
"bot_signals": [],
"cex_label": null
}Top active hours by UTC. Circadian peak → likely W. N. America (Pacific/Mountain).
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