- Liquidity zones are like unfinished business – price usually comes back
- This isn’t a clean breakout – it’s a breakout that left a mess behind
- Patience pays – you don’t need to catch every move to win
You ever have that feeling when a setup looks too clean? Like, too clean? That was me last time I looked at Pi Network.
We had liquidity building up both above and below—classic pressure cooker vibes. The kind of chart that makes you whisper, “Okay… something’s about to go down. Or up.” And there it was: a little bullish impulse that left a fresh demand zone behind. For me, that was the signal.

I figured price would dip, grab the liquidity under that demand, maybe even spook a few over-leveraged traders, and then head back up with strength. Neat and tidy.
But Pi had other plans.
Price Just… Took Off
Instead of dipping, it just launched upward. Straight for the top-side liquidity. Quick and clean.

No dip. No retest. Just a move that left behind the demand zone, and with it, all that juicy liquidity below.
When I saw that, I literally leaned back in my chair and laughed. Because that kind of move? It’s the kind that looks bullish, but deep down, you know it’s left something behind. And the market hates leaving things behind.
So What Now?
Right now, the Pi Network price is retracing a bit. Nothing major—just enough to make people wonder: “Should I buy now?”
Personally? I wouldn’t.
This feels like one of those setups where price might come back down just to collect what it missed. Just to shake out the eager buyers and remind everyone who’s in charge.

And I’ve been caught in those moves before. I once entered long on a similar structure—convinced the move had started—only to watch price nuke right through my entry, hunt the lows, and then actually reverse.
Since then, I’ve learned to respect uncollected liquidity like I respect traffic lights—ignore them, and it’ll cost you.
But Here’s the Thing…
We don’t get guarantees in this game. Price could decide that it doesn’t care about the demand zone and just keeps pushing up. It’s done that before too. And maybe it will again.
That’s why I try to stay open. I map out my scenarios, but I never marry them.
I’ve learned (the hard way) that the market doesn’t care about our expectations. And just because a setup looks good… doesn’t mean it’ll play out.