If you ask about the value of knowledge that is in the PMBOK then it definitely doesn't hurt to learn something more than just Scrum and other agile techniques. What is frequently forgotten is that this body of knowledge comes largely from other industries than IT, is still perfectly valid there and as such is a distilled experience of people who consciously managed different efforts for about a century and a half. It also can be valid in IT as other answers pointed out - also because a project to develop a software product has elements that have nothing to do with software development.
You have to get funding, you have to determine the market, then create and test marketing and advertising strategies, define metrics to follow how your product does in the market and establish a way to monitor them. Then there is logistics. If it is a shrink-wrap product it has to be manufactured, shipped and sold. But even if it is a hosted on-line tool you have to worry about servers, bandwidth etc. There is the legal side to worry about - not only the IP part, but also working out deals with intermediaries, partners and retailers if you have them, creating license agreements etc.
There are many things that have to be thought of, planned and executed in sequence to successfully launch a product. Not all of them can be done with small teams working in short iterations without an upfront plan. So while software itself can and should be made that way everything else doesn't have to - it is not always appropriate.
So, if you are a manager look at all those things - methods, methodologies, practices, techniques - as tools. The more tools you have in your toolbox the more versatile you are. If you just know Scrum, Kanban and XP you are only good for driving software development efforts. If you know more you can do more.
Now, you mention PMP - which is a credential, a certificate. If you ask about its value, then indeed it is diminishing - both overall (because too many people have it) and in the world of software development, where Scrum Masters started to earn more than project managers. However, Scrum certificates will be I think loosing value even faster, because CSM is just an acknowledgment that you have been to a course and didn't fall asleep on it.
Professional Scrum Master certs are harder to get (there is a real exam to pass), which should make them more valuable, but they are not yet widely known. Disclosure: I may be biased on that one, I'm a Scrum.org Scrum Trainer.