Kai Ton Chau is a certified general accountant (CGA) and a certified financial planner
(CFP). Currently he is a public practitioner providing accounting, taxation, financial planning and management consulting services to individuals, businesses and not-for-profit organizations.
With an
extensive background in the not-for-profit sector, Kai Ton’s vision is to assist churches and Christian ministries to achieve a better
understanding of the legal/taxation framework and the social environment that the charity is operating under, and to bring their management
and accounting systems to the current standards. He is a speaker of the well-received Management Seminars for
For individual and business clients, Kai Ton provides active tax, financial and stewardship planning consultation,
corporate planning and taxation services as well as management consultation.
Before going into public practice, Kai Ton had held
senior management positions with several Christian organizations and in the business sector. He was director of finance and administration
with Child Evangelism Fellowship of Ontario and the Institute for Christian Studies (a graduate school affiliated with the Toronto
School of Theology and
After obtaining the CGA designation,
Kai Ton has been active in the education and examination process of the national professional accounting body. He also volunteers
his time preparing income tax returns for seniors, low-income families and new immigrants, speaking to high school students on behalf
on the accounting association, as well as serving as board and council members of several Christian charitable organizations.
Apart from his accounting and finance career, Kai Ton is a professional musician and a sought after speaker, conductor
and workshop leader in music and worship. He has a diploma in composition and a master of music degree in choral conducting. He was a publicity manager with the Hong Kong Philharmonic
Orchestra and a program announcer at Radio Television Hong Kong. As a conductor and music director, he has served many English and Chinese churches in Hong Kong, the