Oil was up in Asia today on traders’ expectations of a hike in Chinese crude demand after a key survey showed its manufacturing activity hitting a 14-month high in December, analysts said.

New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in January, rose 23 cents to $86.98 a barrel and Brent North Sea crude for February delivery advanced five cents to $108.23.

“Oil prices rose... on expectations of improved demand in China after data showed the manufacturing sector in the world number two oil consumer expanded in December at its fastest pace in more than a year,” Phillip Futures said in a report.

Banking giant HSBC in its preliminary purchasing managers’ index (PMI) released on Friday recorded China’s manufacturing activity at 50.9 in December, the highest the index has reached in 14 months.

It was the second straight month that China’s manufacturing has touched the 50-point mark indicating an expansion after 12 consecutive months of contraction.

China’s economic growth hit a more than three-year low of 7.4 per cent in the three months to September, but HSBC’s PMI, together with a series of data released recently, has fuelled optimism of a Chinese economic rebound.