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Pi

Pi price (PI)

Buying Pi (PI) on Bitpanda is easy, fast, and secure. Check the current PI value and live chart in GBP and get to know more about PI.

Pi

Pi price (PI)

Buying Pi (PI) on Bitpanda is easy, fast, and secure. Check the current PI value and live chart in GBP and get to know more about PI.

€0.1106

-€0.0021-1.86 %
-€0.0021-1.86 %



This converter shows values for info only and doesn’t reflect actual transaction rates.

Last updated: 09/06/2026, 19:10:00

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Figures shown refer to the past, and are based on gross performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results, and fees will reduce your net returns. Reference period: last 24 hours. Source: Bitpanda, based on prices from multiple trading venues. Please review the risk disclosure before investing.

Figures shown refer to the past, and are based on gross performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results, and fees will reduce your net returns. Reference period: last 24 hours. Source: Bitpanda, based on prices from multiple trading venues. Please review the risk disclosure before investing.

Price of Pi today

Review the latest Pi price movements. Here is today’s trend at a glance: -1.86 %

Pi price statistics

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Pi market stats

  • Daily high

    €0.11

  • Daily low

    €0.11

  • Volatility (1M)

    13.81%

  • 52W High

    €0.57

  • 52W Low

    €0.10

  • Market cap

    €1.12B

Pi conversion table

1 EUR

9.04 PI

5 EUR

45.20 PI

10 EUR

90.40 PI

15 EUR

135.60 PI

20 EUR

180.80 PI

25 EUR

226.00 PI

1 Pi (PI) to Us Dollar (USD)

USD 0.13

1 Pi (PI) to Swiss Franc (CHF)

CHF 0.10

1 Pi (PI) to British Pound Sterling (GBP)

GBP 0.10

1 Pi (PI) to Turkish Lira (TRY)

TRY 5.92

1 Pi (PI) to Polish Zloty (PLN)

PLN 0.47

1 Pi (PI) to Hungarian Forint (HUF)

HUF 39.03

1 Pi (PI) to Czech Koruna (CZK)

CZK 2.67

1 Pi (PI) to Norwegian Krone (NOK)

NOK 1.22

1 Pi (PI) to Swedish Krona (SEK)

SEK 1.21

1 Pi (PI) to Danish Krone (DKK)

DKK 0.83

1 Pi (PI) to Romanian Leu (RON)

RON 0.58

About Pi (PI)

Pi Network is a social cryptocurrency and developer platform designed for accessibility and real-world utility. Users mine and transact Pi via a mobile-friendly interface within its blockchain ecosystem. With a declining issuance model, Pi supports decentralised applications and commerce.

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  • ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) regulations for crypto assets aim to address their environmental impact (e.g., energy-intensive mining), promote transparency, and ensure ethical governance practices to align the crypto industry with broader sustainability and societal goals. These regulations encourage compliance with standards that mitigate risks and foster trust in digital assets.

  • Description

    These assets function as the native currency of a Layer-1 blockchain. They were created primarily to facilitate the transfer of value across a decentralised network without the need for intermediaries such as banks or payment processors. Users typically hold these assets to store value outside of the traditional financial system, hedge against inflation, or make peer-to-peer payments.

    Risks

    Volatility and Valuation Models. The value of these assets is not derived from traditional financial metrics such as revenue, dividends, cash flow, or interest rates. Unlike equities or bonds, there is no underlying balance sheet or earnings report to anchor the valuation. Instead, value depends heavily on network adoption, security hashrate, public perception, and speculative supply and demand dynamics. Consequently, prices can be extremely volatile and may react sharply to news cycles, macroeconomic shifts, regulatory announcements, or changes in investor sentiment. It is common for these assets to experience significant percentage fluctuations within a single trading day.

    Consensus Mechanism Risks. Many payments-focused blockchains utilise a Proof-of-Work (PoW) consensus mechanism. While robust, these networks are susceptible to a '51% attack'. This occurs if a single malicious actor or a colluding group of miners gains control of more than half of the network's mining power. If successful, the attacker could disrupt the network, prevent new transactions from gaining confirmations, reverse transactions completed while they were in control, and double-spend tokens. Smaller PoW networks face a significantly higher probability of such attacks.

    Scaling and Transaction Costs. These networks often prioritise security and decentralisation over transaction throughput. During periods of high global demand, the network's waiting area for unconfirmed transactions (mempool) may become congested. This results in a competitive fee market where users must pay increasingly higher fees to have their transactions prioritised by miners. This congestion can lead to significant delays in transaction processing times and a sharp increase in transaction fees. Users may find it prohibitively expensive or slow to move assets when they need them most, particularly during periods of market panic.

    Environmental Impact and Regulatory Scrutiny. PoW networks consume vast amounts of electrical energy to secure the ledger. This high energy consumption has led to criticism from environmental groups and policymakers. There is a tangible risk of regulatory crackdowns, carbon taxes, or outright bans on mining operations in various jurisdictions. Such regulatory interventions could destabilise the network by reducing the security hashrate or limiting the asset's integration with the traditional financial system and ESG-focused institutional investors.

    Limited Upgradability. Due to their decentralised nature and reliance on broad consensus among thousands of independent node operators for protocol changes, these networks can be slow to upgrade. This rigidity may prevent the protocol from adapting to new technical threats or implementing desirable features found in newer, more agile blockchains. This could lead to a gradual loss of market share and value over time as users migrate to more technologically advanced alternatives.

    Finality Risk. Transactions on PoW blockchains are probabilistic rather than deterministic. While a transaction may appear confirmed after being included in a block, there is always a theoretical risk of a 'chain reorganisation' where a competing chain with more accumulated proof-of-work becomes the definitive chain. This event could result in previously confirmed transactions being reversed or erased from the ledger.