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			 It reported improved sales and profit margins for the holiday season 
			quarter, and the department store chain expects to make further 
			strides this year. 
			 
			Penney forecast that comparable sales, which include e-commerce and 
			revenue at stores open at least a year, will be up by a "mid-single 
			digit" percentage for this fiscal year, and it expects "significant" 
			gains in its gross profit margin. 
			 
			Shares were up 16.1 percent to 6.92 in afterhours trading, on top of 
			a 5.7 percent increase the regular session. 
			 
			The stock, still well below its $21.70 price of a year ago, has been 
			under pressure for months on Wall Street speculation that slow sales 
			growth would force the debt-laden company to try to raise more money 
			after doing so three times in 2013. 
			 
			But the retailer quelled those concerns when it said it expected to 
			have $2 billion in cash and lending capacity at year-end, the same 
			level as at the start. 
			 
			"The 2014 liquidity guidance implies that the business can 
			self-fund," said William Frohnhoefer, an analyst with BTIG. 
			  
            
			  
			 
			Penney is trying to win back more shoppers after it tried 
			unsuccessfully in 2012 to go upmarket and alienated many long-time 
			customers, leading to a 30 percent sales decline over two years. 
			 
			To do so, in the last few months, the retailer has ditched brands 
			that were part of the failed re-invention but didn't catch on, such 
			as Bodum and JoeFresh Kids, and gave more floor space to popular 
			in-house brands such as St. John's Bay. 
			 
			In the fourth quarter, the retailer reported its first quarter of 
			comparable sales gains, a rise of 2 percent, in almost two years. 
			 
			Clearing out the jettisoned brands took a big toll on Penney's gross 
			margin, a gauge of merchandise profit that came in at 28.4 percent 
			of sales during the fourth quarter, less than Wall Street expected. 
			Penney said it had to offer bigger-than-expected bargains during a 
			particularly competitive holiday season. 
            
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			But Penney said it has gotten that clearance merchandise out of its 
			system and does not expect any lingering impact on gross margin this 
			year. The company projected gross margin will improve 
			"significantly" this year on its way back to historical levels of 39 
			percent. 
			 
			"The most challenging and expensive parts of the turnaround are 
			behind us and the work we did in 2013 has laid the foundation for 
			continued progress in 2014," Penney Chief Executive Myron Ullman 
			told analysts on a conference call. 
			 
			REBOUND IN ONLINE SALES 
			 
			Penney's online sales also rebounded, helped by Ullman 
			re-integrating planning and buying teams for its digital and stores 
			divisions. 
			 
			For the fourth quarter ended Feb 1, Penney reported net income of 
			$35 million, or 11 cents per share, compared with a loss of $552 
			million, or $2.51 per share, a year earlier. 
			 
			Excluding certain items but including a pension cost, Penney had an 
			adjusted loss of 68 cents per share during the quarter, while Wall 
			Street was expecting a loss of 82 cents. 
			 
			Shares have fallen 75 percent in the last year. Its stock is 
			particularly volatile: Some 39.4 percent of shares are held short by 
			investors betting on shares falling. 
			 
			(Reporting by Phil Wahba in New York; 
			Editing by Cynthia Osterman) 
				
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