Will Global Supply Shocks Explode Cotton Prices?Cotton FuturesNYMEX_DL:TT1!the5erstradingCotton sits at a genuine inflection point, but the case for a durable bottom is more mixed than the headlines suggest. Prices have actually declined roughly 4% over the past month even as they ticked modestly higher into July, and the most recent independent analysis available called the bears still in control. The one unambiguous catalyst is policy, not speculation: India's textile ministry lifted its 11% cotton import duty from June 1 through October 30, the second such waiver in a year, giving spinning mills and yarn producers real but limited relief on input costs. That's a genuine support factor. Talk of a sharp, China-driven rebound is not yet backed by the scale of actual purchases on the tape. The macro picture cuts both ways. A hawkish Federal Reserve has kept the dollar firm, which makes US cotton more expensive for foreign buyers and has kept export sales subdued, while cheaper crude has made synthetic fibers more price competitive, a structural headwind cotton has been fighting for years. Working against that, USDA's latest supply and demand estimates point to a tighter 2026/27 global balance, with world ending stocks projected at their lowest since 2018/19 and production expected to fall almost everywhere except India. That tightening is the more durable bullish argument here, more so than any single rumor of Chinese demand returning. Underneath the daily price noise, the structural story in cotton is shifting toward risk management rather than speculation. Hedging through forward contracts has become close to mandatory for mills trying to protect margins against this volatility, and the supply side is leaning harder on technology, climate-resilient GM seed traits, drone-based soil monitoring, and precision fertilizer application to protect yields as weather risk in places like India and Texas becomes a bigger swing factor than trade headlines. The near-term path depends on a narrow set of catalysts worth watching directly: whether Indian monsoon rainfall supports or delays planting, whether US crop conditions hold up through the growing season, and whether China's actual purchase volumes, not rumors of them, start showing up in the weekly export data. Until then, this looks less like an explosive breakout and more like a market searching for a floor amid a genuinely tighter supply outlook.