AT&T ends sponsorship of scandal-hit Tiger Woods

The U.S. telecommunications company is the latest corporate  sponsor to back away from the world’s first billionaire athlete  since he became engulfed in allegations of multiple  extramarital affairs following a mysterious minor car accident  outside his Florida home on Nov. 27.

AT&T, which had previously said it was assessing its  relationship with Woods, said in a brief statement on Thursday:  “We are ending our sponsorship agreement with Tiger Woods and  wish him well in the future.”

Woods, believed to be the world’s wealthiest athlete,  estimated to earn about $100 million a year in endorsement  deals before his troubles, confessed on Dec. 11 to “infidelity”  to his Swedish wife Elin Nordegren. He announced he would take  an indefinite break from golf to save his marriage.

The scandal may have cost shareholders of companies  endorsed by the world’s No. 1 golfer $5 billion to $12 billion  in losses, according to a study by two economics professors  from the University of California, Davis.

“Our analysis makes clear that while having a celebrity of  Tiger Woods’ stature as an endorser has undeniable upside, the  downside risk is substantial, too,” one of the professors,  Victor Stango of UC Davis Graduate School of Management, said  in a statement released along with the study.

Some economic analysts, however, have questioned the  accuracy of the UC Davis study, although they acknowledge that  Woods’ own marketable value as a subject for corporate  endorsement has been badly hit by the scandal.

Sponsors who have revised their relationship with Woods  include technology outsourcing and consulting firm Accenture  Plc, which ended its endorsement, and Procter & Gamble Co’s  shaving products maker Gillette, which dropped the golfer from  its marketing. ID:nN31247520
Some other companies, however, like American athletic shoe  maker Nike Inc, have said they are standing by the golfer.

The scandal saw a parade of more than a dozen women — from  cocktail waitresses to porn stars — come forward to say they  had affairs with the married father of two.

Since the start of the scandal, Woods, who had previously  carefully maintained a public image of a clean-living sports  and family man, has kept out of sight of the media.