* Saudi regulator proves possible manipulation -traders
* Petrochem stocks continue slide
* Kuwait rises before Q1 earnings
* Air Arabia jumps 4.7 pct in Dubai
* Bank Muscat slides after fraud hits Q1 earnings
By Nadia Saleem and David French
DUBAI, April 17 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's bourse dropped for a fifth straight session as a further fall in oil prices and weak global markets weighed on shares. Insurance stocks slumped as the financial regulator probed possible market manipulation, according to traders.
Brent crude
This hurt petrochemical shares; Saudi Basic Industries Corp
The insurance sector's index
"A CMA inspection into illegal trading caused a deep correction in speculative stocks," said Mohammad Omran, an independent financial analyst based in Riyadh. "The inspection rang a bell that there is a watchdog."
In Kuwait, the measure
The market resumed gains after a dip earlier this week when a prominent Kuwaiti opposition politician was sentenced to five years in jail for insulting the emir.
"The market is oblivious to political instability and this is adding to the favourable sentiment, which should propel the market further towards the 7,500 level that many thought unattainable," said Fouad Darwish, head of brokerage at Global Investment House.
National Bank of Kuwait
In Dubai, the index
"What has surprised some of us is that there has been an increase in volumes earlier than thought - usually people price in Q1 earnings towards the end of April," said an Abu Dhabi-based trader who asked not to be identified.
Investors are betting on strong earnings growth, not just for the first quarter but for the year ahead, he added. Most United Arab Emirates companies have yet to report their quarterly numbers.
Oman's bourse
Qatar's exchange
WEDNESDAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
SAUDI ARABIA
* The index
KUWAIT
* The measure
DUBAI
* The index
ABU DHABI
* The index
EGYPT
* The measure
OMAN
* The index
QATAR
* The benchmark
BAHRAIN
* The measure
($1 = 0.3850 Omani rials)
(Editing by Andrew Torchia)
((nadia.saleem@thomsonreuters.com)(+97143664256)(Reuters Messaging: nadia.saleem.thomsonreuteres@reuters.net))
Keywords: MIDEAST MARKETS/WRAP




















