
0xde17...0988Profit
+$727K
Volume
$45.8M
Who Is 0xde17f714…? The Anonymous Whale That Made $727K on Polymarket's Bitcoin Markets — Then Vanished
The wallet 0xde17f7144fbd0eddb2679132c10ff5e74b120988 made roughly $727,000 trading Bitcoin price-threshold markets on Polymarket over about two months in early 2026 — then stopped trading and disappeared. It has no username. Its name on Polymarket is the address itself, which is why people keep typing the full forty-two-character string into Google: they are not searching for a brand, they are asking a single question. Who is this?
This is what the blockchain can answer, and what it can't.
The Wallet With No Name
Most traders we profile have a handle — TROLLSK, yjcr, a pseudonym with a story behind it. This one has nothing. The Polymarket profile for 0xde17f7144fbd0eddb2679132c10ff5e74b120988 displays the raw address where a username would go. No bio. No avatar. No linked socials.
So the only identity it has is the one search engines gave it. People who watched this wallet move size during the spring of 2026 wrote the address down, and months later they are still pasting it into a search bar to see if it ever came back.
Here is what the on-chain record shows.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Wallet | 0xde17f7144fbd0eddb2679132c10ff5e74b120988 |
| Chain | Polygon PoS |
| Joined | February 2026 |
| Wallet age | 96 days |
| All-time profit | ~$727,450 |
| Realized PnL | +$719,900 |
| Lifetime volume | $45.8M |
| Markets traded | 1,168 |
| Total trades | 166,650 |
| Win / Loss | 3,443 / 1,656 (67.5% win rate) |
| Avg. hold | 1.3 days |
| Best single trade | $61,900 |
| Current portfolio value | $0 |
Roughly $727K of profit on $45.8M of volume, built in about two months, from a wallet that today holds nothing. You can see the full history on its FrenFlow profile.
What 0xde17f714… Actually Traded
This was not a degenerate flipping five-minute candles. The wallet specialized in Bitcoin price-threshold markets — daily and weekly contracts that ask whether BTC will be above, below, or between specific dollar levels by a deadline. The kind of markets it traded looked like this:
- Will the price of Bitcoin be above $70,000 on April 5?
- Will Bitcoin reach $74,000 March 30 – April 5?
- Will Bitcoin be between $70,000 and $72,000?
These are level bets, not velocity bets. You are not guessing whether the next candle is green. You are taking a view on where BTC settles relative to a strike by a fixed date — which means you have hours or days to be right, and you can size into mispriced thresholds when the order book overreacts.
The timing is the part that makes the record coherent rather than lucky. Through late March 2026, Bitcoin was chopping in a tight band — roughly $70,600 to $71,900 — sitting almost exactly on top of the $70,000, $72,000 and $74,000 strikes these markets were written against (Fortune, Finance Magnates). That is the single most lucrative environment for threshold trading: price pinned near the strike, every market participant uncertain, probabilities swinging on every $300 move. A trader who reads that regime well gets repeated, high-frequency edge on contracts that pay $1.00 and trade at fifty-something cents.
A 67.5% win rate over 5,099 resolved positions is not a coin flip. Across that many outcomes, the edge is structural, not random.
The Exit Nobody Saw Coming
Here is where the story turns.
The last trade on record for this wallet is dated March 30, 2026, at 12:10 UTC. After that — nothing. No new positions. No re-entries when BTC moved. The wallet that had been firing 166,650 trades into Bitcoin threshold markets simply stopped.
Today the portfolio is worth $0. There are 94 residual positions still attached to the account, but every one of them is valued at zero — dust from expired range markets that resolved against tiny leftover stakes, the kind of trailing positions a trader doesn't bother to clean up when they walk away. The realized PnL of +$719,900 tells the real story: the money was taken off the table and the account was abandoned.
So the full arc is this. A wallet with no name appears in February 2026. For roughly eight weeks it grinds Bitcoin price-threshold markets with a 67.5% win rate, pushing $45.8M through the order book and best trade of $61,900. By the end of March it has cleared north of $720,000. Then it closes out, leaves the dust behind, and goes silent.
That is not how a gambler behaves. Gamblers don't quit while they're up. This reads like someone who had a defined edge in a specific market regime, extracted it methodically, and left when the regime — or the opportunity — changed. (For context, Bitcoin had drifted back toward $61K by early June 2026, well below the strike band where this wallet thrived.)
Why People Still Search the Address
The reason 0xde17f7144fbd0eddb2679132c10ff5e74b120988 is a search query and not just a row in a leaderboard is that the silence is the most interesting part. A trader who keeps trading is legible — you can watch them, follow them, copy them. A trader who makes $727K and vanishes leaves a question that the chain can't close.
Was it one person? A desk? A model? Will it come back under this address, or has it already reappeared somewhere else under a fresh wallet? Nobody knows. That's the whole appeal. The blockchain records exactly what happened and refuses to say who did it.
This Is Exactly What Whale-Tracking Is For
There's a practical lesson buried in the mystery. The only reason we can tell this story at all is that every move this wallet made is permanently on-chain. The profit, the volume, the 67.5% win rate, the precise timestamp of the last trade — none of it required the trader's cooperation. The wallet was anonymous; its behavior was not.
That asymmetry is the entire premise of tracking Polymarket whales. You don't need to know who someone is to follow what they do. If a wallet like this one ever lit up again — a first trade after months of silence, size flowing back into Bitcoin thresholds — that is a signal you'd want to catch in real time, not discover three weeks later in a leaderboard.
That's what FrenFlow is built to surface:
- A leaderboard ranked by verified on-chain PnL — so a wallet like
0xde17f714…shows up on the strength of its record, not its marketing. - Real-time activity with a same-block detection goal, so a dormant whale's return registers as it happens.
- Bot detection that flags high-frequency wallets, so you can tell a directional thesis apart from a latency machine.
- Non-custodial tracking and copy trading — you watch and mirror without ever handing over your funds.
The next anonymous whale is already trading somewhere. The question is whether you'll be watching the leaderboard when they show up — or googling their address six months later, like everyone is still doing with this one.
Figures are as of June 2026 and reflect on-chain data at the time of writing. PnL and positions move with the market.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is the wallet 0xde17f7144fbd0eddb2679132c10ff5e74b120988 on Polymarket?
It is an anonymous Polymarket trader whose profile has no username — the account is listed under its own wallet address, 0xde17f7144fbd0eddb2679132c10ff5e74b120988, on the Polygon network. It joined in February 2026, traded Bitcoin price-threshold markets almost exclusively, made roughly $727,000 in profit over about two months, and stopped trading on March 30, 2026. Its real-world identity is unknown.
How much did 0xde17f714… make on Polymarket?
The wallet's all-time profit is roughly $727,450, with realized PnL of about +$719,900, built on $45.8M of lifetime volume across 1,168 markets. Its win rate was 67.5% (3,443 wins to 1,656 losses) and its single best trade was worth $61,900.
What markets did the 0xde17 wallet trade?
Almost exclusively Bitcoin price-threshold markets — daily and weekly Polymarket contracts asking whether BTC would be above, below, or between specific dollar levels (such as "above $70,000 on April 5" or "between $70,000 and $72,000") by a fixed deadline. These are level bets that resolve over hours or days, not five-minute crypto candles.
Why did 0xde17f714… stop trading?
The wallet's last recorded trade was on March 30, 2026, and its portfolio value is now $0 with only zero-valued dust positions remaining. The on-chain pattern — methodical profit-taking followed by a clean exit — suggests a trader who had a defined edge during a specific Bitcoin price regime and left once they'd extracted it. By early June 2026 Bitcoin had fallen well below the strike band where the wallet was most active.
Can I track wallets like this on Polymarket?
Yes. FrenFlow lets you track any Polymarket wallet by address or username — including this one — with a leaderboard ranked by verified on-chain PnL and real-time activity alerts, so if a dormant whale ever resumes trading, you can see it as it happens. See our guide on how to track Polymarket whales for the full method.
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