Although Phil Town has his own technique in finding companies with meaning, I’ve just gone through all the major European and American indices and looked there for companies with meaning to me. Here is the list that I ended up with.Let’s pick a sample company (Apple). I understand what Apple produces, I was, and I am an Apple-product user, plus I would like to own this company for more than 10 years.Brand, secret, switching, and price are the moats of Apple. The Apple brand is one of the most valuable brands in the world, the secret they have is their operating system and various software and hardware exclusivities. Many professionals like musicians and video editors are stuck with Apple products because of their Logic Pro and Final Cut software is an example of switching moat, and as far as price, they are at their own league, they set their own threshold. For the next step, let’s enter it in stockrow.com and check the big five numbers of the company and their growth rates for more than 5 years.www.stockrow.com“Revenue Growth” is located under Financials — Income — Annual — Revenue Growth“ROIC” is located under Financials — Metrics — Annual — ROIC“Book Value Per Share” is Located under Financials — Metrics — Annual — Book Value Per Share“EPS” is located under Financials — Growth — Annual — EPS“Free Cash Flow Growth” is located under Financials — Growth — Annual — Free Cash Flow GrowthWe don’t need a spreadsheet software to see that Apple is all over the place, and it’s not a “wonderful company.” In any case, below, you see all the “big five numbers of Apple in my spreadsheet. Stockrow didn’t provide us with the “Book Value per Share” growth rate, so I needed to calculate myself. The spreadsheet function is…