JPMorgan chief Dimon gets 35% raise

Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, on December 1, 2015 in Washington, DC

Wall Street's most prominent banker, JPMorgan Chase's chief executive Jamie Dimon, is getting a 35 percent raise this year. Dimon was given a $7 million pay hike by the bank's board of directors Thursday, boosting his compensation to $27 million. That comprises a $1.5 million base salary, a cash bonus of $5 million and $20.5 million in stock options, according to a securities filing by the bank. The raise came after the bank saw $24.4 billion in earnings last year, a gain of 12.5 percent. Dimon, who carried the bank through the financial crisis more steadily than rivals but then stumbled badly with both hefty post-crisis legal costs and the massive London Whale trading loss, is hardly the best-paid banker on Wall Street. His counterparts at Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo enjoy better paychecks.