Pi Coin (PI) price is down 2% in the past 24 hours and 4.5% over the last week, extending its 43% monthly decline. The token has been stuck in a tight range near $0.20, with neither buyers nor sellers taking full control.
However, recent signals show a clear divide between bullish and bearish forces. While sellers appear to be losing some strength, key indicators still point to a fragile setup where the downside looks easier to trigger than a Pi Coin price recovery.
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The Money Flow Index (MFI), which tracks money moving in and out of the asset, highlights a bearish divergence. Between October 10 and 17, PI’s price formed a higher low, but the MFI printed a lower low. That pattern shows weaker buying strength despite stable prices — a sign that retail traders are holding back.
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Adding to that, the Chaikin Money Flow (CMF), which tracks large money inflows, remains slightly positive but has fallen sharply since October 20. A drop in CMF above the zero line often signals that while big investors are still present, they’re pulling back on fresh buys.
Together, the falling MFI and CMF point to fading demand from both small and large holders. Unless inflows improve, any Pi Coin price rebound could stay short-lived.
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The one indicator holding the bullish structure together is the Bull Bear Power (BBP). This indicator measures the gap between buying and selling strength. Since October 7, bearish momentum has been shrinking steadily. The red bars on the chart have grown smaller — showing that sellers are losing force.
It’s not a full reversal yet, but the consistent decline in bearish power suggests that downside pressure is slowly wearing off. This is the only factor currently keeping Pi Coin’s short-term structure from breaking down completely.
Falling Pi Coin Price Wedge Pattern Hints at a Battle Between Two Extremes
Pi Coin continues to trade inside a falling wedge on the daily timeframe. This pattern typically precedes bullish reversals. But the breakout point remains far above current levels.
For a confirmed upside move, the PI price would need a 34% rally to cross $0.27 (the strongest near-term resistance), followed by a close above $0.29 to break the upper wedge boundary. If that happens, the price could target $0.30 and even $0.34.
On the other hand, the bearish scenario is much easier to trigger. A clean drop below $0.19 could send the Pi Coin price quickly to $0.15, where the wedge’s lower trendline sits. Since that lower wedge trendline only comes with two clear touchpoints, it’s weak — and a break there could open the door to deeper losses.
In short, the Pi Coin bears have a shorter distance to win. A 5% drop would confirm a breakdown, while bulls need more than six times that effort for a breakout.