Yes. For example a company with a 10p dividend that stays constant but whose net profit increases must be spending that net profit on assets or growth or other 'good' things that should increase the value of the company - otherwise they would pay it out and increase the divi!
A shareholder gets a portion of the companies profits when a dividend is paid.
A share of a company's profits
a small section of anything
The profits available for the distribution among the shareholders of a company as dividend are called divisible profits.
what causes a company's dividend rise faster than it's own profits dictate.
Because dividend cover represents the amount of times by which dividends can be paid by profits. i.e. the company's ability to pay it's dividends. The higher the dividend cover the greater the ability of the company to pay dividends out of it's distributable profits. Dividends according to companies act legislation can only be paid out of distributable profits hence the relevance of dividend cover represents the companies ability to pay their dividends.
A dividend is a portion of the companies profits paid to it's Stockholders.
the corporation's profits
They are called dividends.
Corporations have shareholders that invest in their business and expect a portion of the business's profits in return. Dividend payments are part of the shareholders' returns for investing in a business. Corporations have a choice to either reinvest their profits in shares, or keep a portion of the profits and paying shareholders dividends.
The stock Dividend is more or less profit sharing. When a dividend paying company is profitable they pass along those profits to the shareholders in the form of a dividend check.
Return on equity is influenced by profits and not from dividends.