Hong Kong's stock market chief predicted Thursday that mainland Chinese investors will one day be able to take part in yuan-denominated IPOs following further moves by Chinese regulators aimed at promoting the city as a yuan hub, AP reported. Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing's Chief Executive Officer Charles Li said that letting mainland Chinese invest in a stock offering at the same time as other investors would eliminate the risk of a price bubble and was the most "politically feasible" method. A Chinese regulatory official said earlier this week that the country would loosen restrictions to encourage mainland Chinese companies to hold yuan stock listings in Hong Kong. Chinese stock market investors are currently restricted to so-called A-shares traded on the country's domestic markets in Shanghai and Shenzhen. Otherwise, they have few opportunities to invest their cash. A plan in 2007 to allow mainland Chinese to invest directly in Hong Kong's stock market sent the benchmark Hang Seng Index to a record high as Hong Kong investors anticipated a wave of pent-up cash flowing in from the mainland. But the plan was later shelved. Hong Kong is a special administrative region of China with a separate legal and financial system and its own currency, the Hong Kong dollar. Li said that by allowing Chinese investors to get in on an initial public offering or secondary share placement, "they're not going to suffer because stock has already been bid up by people waiting for them to come." Letting mainlanders invest in stocks denominated in the steadily appreciating yuan would also eliminate any exchange rate risks, he added. -- SPA