Market breadth indicators tied to "futures in stock" reveal cyclical sectors posting higher advance/decline ratios, a bullish signal that often precedes multi-week rallies. First, a short primer on what a stock split entails. Stock splits are when a company increases or decreases its outstanding shares, which also causes a change in its share price. It's important to note that the underlying value of the company doesn't change from a split. Timmer, in an X post, warned investors to be prepared for a 1999-style market melt-up, drawing direct parallels between today's market dynamics and the period leading up to the 2000 tech bust. Healthcare and consumer staples are showing relative strength in "futures in stock" trading, signaling a defensive undercurrent despite overall market optimism.