Pi Network price down 14% as PI hits new all-time low
Pi Network (PI) has slumped to another all-time low, trading just above $0.07 after a 14% daily drop. The latest sell-off pushed PI to $0.07059, while it was already down after the July 13 low near $0.086. Overall, PI is down about 35% on the week and roughly 97.5% since its February 2025 peak.
Analysts point to two main drivers behind the PI price down. First, large token unlocks could increase supply as long-waiting holders look to sell. Second, buying demand appears weak, so selling pressure has outweighed any bids.
One contributor also blamed team execution, arguing the core team may be unprepared for the market reality. A scheduled release of 775M+ coins through year-end could land on exchanges, adding further liquidity pressure. The analysis says no single announcement, ecosystem update, or “Pi DEX” is likely to reverse the PI price down without changes to supply, demand, and liquidity.
Suggested fixes discussed include burning a substantial portion of remaining supply, pursuing listings on major exchanges (e.g., Binance and Coinbase), and introducing a transparent, sustainable buyback-and-burn mechanism. Traders should watch for whether upcoming unlocks and liquidity conditions continue to drive PI price down or stabilize bids.
Bearish
The article describes a fast-moving bearish regime for Pi Network: PI is breaking down into fresh all-time lows (daily -14%, weekly -35%, ~-97.5% vs. the 2025 peak). Token unlocks plus weak spot demand typically reinforce sell pressure, and the piece suggests upcoming unlock volume could hit exchanges—an overhang traders often react to by reducing risk or selling into rallies. This resembles prior token-supply events in crypto where unlock schedules and exchange-facing liquidity spikes coincided with persistent drawdowns.
Short term: continued sell pressure around unlock timing can keep volatility elevated and bids fragile, making dips easier to accelerate. Watch for any sign that buy-side demand is reappearing (volume/price stabilization) or that liquidity conditions improve.
Long term: the article points to governance/execution risks—without supply-demand and liquidity fixes (burns, major listings, transparent buyback-and-burn), the market may keep pricing PI as a promise rather than proven utility. Even if the ecosystem grows, the stated mechanism changes are what would most likely improve PI’s long-run risk/reward.