Only 14, are you sure? In Japan alone there are if I remember correctly, more than 20 exchanges that are fully compliant with the Japanese government's regulations. In fact, if you are operating there with an office then you have a license, and the only way to get a license with Japan is to apply and get approval.
It is 14 percent, not just 14 pieces. Anyway, I am not so sure if I have to believe this figure but coming from Coinfirm which I believe a very reliable source maybe there can be some stories we don't know fully as to how this whole thing happened especially when we assumed that many governments right now are requiring full compliance with the law when it comes to the business of cryptocurrency exchange. At any rate, compliance with the law does not guarantee that an exchange will not be experiencing problems big and small when it comes to security but this can help in pinpointing the very people behind the exchange so we know whom to prosecute in case something can go very wrong.
Good catch, but that's still only about 30 exchanges. They have to properly define regulated exchange first.
If we go by the logical assumption that licenced exchanges in recognised jurisdictions are regulatory compliant and, therefore, regulated, then that's 100% of all exchanges in jurisdictions where crypto exchange licences are issued: that's at least in Japan, South Korea, Thailand, and then we've got all the various European jurisdictions including the EEA and EU itself.
That means all Estonian crypto exchanges, all those registered within Malta, San Marino, Gibraltar etc... hell, even Binance wanted to fund/invest money into Bermuda just so Binance would get compliant and regulated there:
Source:
NY Times, Bermuda