Recently, I took a quick look at some of the most profitable active addresses on BNB Chain and found an interesting phenomenon. These addresses have unusually short operation cycles, mostly quick in and out. What is the underlying logic—does someone have a certain fast arbitrage technique, or are everyone actually using similar strategies to snatch orders? Looking at this data really helps to shed some light on the issue.
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MoonlightGamer
· 10h ago
Fast in and fast out... Isn't this just a robot placing orders?
Honestly, there's nothing new; it's been like this for a long time.
Good data ≠ real profit, what about the gas fees?
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ProxyCollector
· 12h ago
Quick in and out can make money, how am I losing money?
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FrontRunFighter
· 12h ago
yo this screams MEV extraction all over it... those short cycles? classic sandwich attack patterns or frontrunning bots siphoning value before retail even sees the tx
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GasGuzzler
· 12h ago
Fast in and out—I've seen this trick many times. To put it simply, it's just robots snatching MEV.
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CascadingDipBuyer
· 12h ago
Fast in, fast out? Bro, this is just arbitrage trading, nothing new
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I’m familiar with this rhythm, bots + flash loans, it’s been everywhere for a long time
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Talking with data? Come on, half of them are hunters in the dark forest
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The ones truly making money are no longer showing off on-chain; these are just cannon fodder
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Sniping orders? You really use that term... it’s actually smart contracts fighting each other
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Can this routine on BNB last until now? Bro, you might be too late
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Mastering technical skills... in simple terms, it’s just about cheap gas fees allowing repeated trial and error
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There are more addresses that come and go quickly, but you can’t see the ones making real big money
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LiquiditySurfer
· 13h ago
Quick in and out? Bro, I've seen too much of that. Most likely, it's just robots running arbitrage scripts.
Recently, I took a quick look at some of the most profitable active addresses on BNB Chain and found an interesting phenomenon. These addresses have unusually short operation cycles, mostly quick in and out. What is the underlying logic—does someone have a certain fast arbitrage technique, or are everyone actually using similar strategies to snatch orders? Looking at this data really helps to shed some light on the issue.