ASIA鈥橲 FACTORIES ended a strong 2017 on a mixed note, with activity at multi-year highs in Taiwan and India and surprisingly picking up in China, but contracting聽in some聽places in a sign聽regional聽interest rate hikes聽likely will聽be gradual.

A trend of synchronized global growth that became apparent over the course of last year looked set to continue, with activity surveys in the euro zone and the United States later in the day expected to post strong readings.

鈥淩obust external demand and accommodative domestic monetary policy should help keep Asian manufacturing sectors in good shape,鈥 said Krystal Tan, Asia economist at Capital Economics.

In China, manufacturing growth unexpectedly picked up to a four-month high in December amid a surge in new orders, suggesting continued strength in global trade.

The Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers鈥 Index (PMI) rose to 51.5 last month, from 50.8 in November, and far outpaced economists鈥 expectations for a dip to 50.6. The 50-mark divides expansion from contraction on a monthly basis.

Tuesday鈥檚 survey, which pushed Asian shares to their highest in a decade, was somewhat at odds with a much larger official China PMI survey on Sunday. It showed a slowdown in growth amid a crackdown on pollution and measures to curb risky financing and cool the housing market.

Analysts say the difference stems from the fact that the Caixin/PMI index tracks smaller, private firms, more sensitive to exports.

China is expected to have grown by close to 7% in 2017, but the world鈥檚 second-largest economy is likely to slow in the new year on the back of those measures, highlighted as policy priorities at October鈥檚 key Communist Party congress.

Beijing is expected to target 2018 growth at around 6.5%.

鈥淲e believe a moderate growth slowdown to be more visible in the first half of 2018, especially on the investment front, due mainly to the tight financial conditions and a cooldown of the property market,鈥 BofA Merrill Lynch economists said.

China鈥檚 slowdown means that for the rest of Asia, the pace of rate increases is unlikely to match that of the US Federal Reserve, which is seen hiking two to three times in 2018.

There will likely be 鈥渙nly a few rate hikes here and there across the region over the coming two years,鈥 HSBC analysts said in a note, even as they expect Asian economies to keep chugging along in 2018, led by tech and trade.

In November, the Bank of Korea raised interest rates for the first time in more than six years, becoming the first major Asian central bank to hike since 2014. Malaysia and the Philippines could hike early this year, then Australia and New Zealand later on.

On Sunday, South Korea鈥檚 central bank chief said monetary policy should remain accommodative as inflationary pressures remained weak. Factory activity, which has been riding a global tech boom, contracted in December, dropping from a 4-1/2 year high in November, the Nikkei/Markit survey showed.

Another major tech producer, Taiwan, saw manufacturing activity hitting its highest since April 2011 at 56.6 last month, according to a December survey.

Singapore on Tuesday posted slower economic growth in the fourth quarter than the third as manufacturing shrank 11.5% following an eye-popping 38% jump in the previous three months.

However, full-year growth was still the fastest in three years at 3.5%, raising the possibility that the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) could tighten its exchange rate-based monetary policy this year.

鈥淕iven robust GDP growth and inflation upside risk, we think MAS will shift and tighten to a 鈥榤ild appreciation bias鈥 at the April meeting,鈥 Maybank Kim Eng economist Chua Hak Bin said.

PMIs for Japan, which surpassed growth expectations in 2017 on the back of the surging tech and trade cycle globally, will be released on Thursday.

The Nikkei/Markit survey for India鈥檚 December factory activity showed it expanded at the fastest pace in five years, buoyed by a rise in output and new orders, which allowed firms to raise prices. The data firms up views that interest rates in Asia鈥檚 third-largest economy have probably bottomed.

December factory activity accelerated in Vietnam, but shrank marginally in Malaysia and Indonesia. 鈥 Reuters