Answer:
They own equal shares of company assets.
Explanation:
The statement above is false because shareholders can own vastly different amounts of shares.
For example, a group of 2 people and 5 companies own over 50% of the shares of Alphabet (the corporation that owns Google), giving this small group of people the voting power to take decisions during assemblies.
Meanwhile, thousands of investors also own a small number of shares of Alphabet because it is a publicly traded company, but these small investors have essentially no voting power.