Assuming you mean shares of stock, the short answer is "no". While stocks and bonds used to be issued in paper form, modern trading is electronic with many checks and balances. Clearing houses and brokerage firms know exactly how many shares trade at what price and to whom they were sold. You could theoretically fake a stock certificate, but in modern trading no one would take that at face value without verifiable proof that you actually own the asset (i.e., a balance in a brokerage account that can be verified).
Everything can be counterfeited.
Pass counterfeited
Yes.
A very good question. All key-date collectible coins have been counterfeited for many years, that's the simple answer. As to the most, all one & three dollar gold coins struck by the US have been counterfeited and all Trade Dollars also.
There should be, but that can be counterfeited too.
Capable of being falsified, counterfeited, or corrupted.
$20
The most counterfeited dollar bill of all time is the $20 bill. It is one of the most commonly used denominations in circulation, making it a popular choice for counterfeiters.
Need more info since they aren't counterfeited.
Not really, except for the melt value of whatever metals they contain.
demate shares are those shares which are kept in electronic form where as physical shares are those shares which are kept in the traditional paper form....
There are different types of shares available. Some examples include ordinary shares, preferred shares, cumulative preference shares, and redeemable shares.