Bosch reports first loss since 2009 with positive outlook

Automotive supplier Bosch posted its first loss since 2009 last fiscal year, with a net deficit of 400 million euros. Despite domestic losses, CEO Stefan Hartung looks ahead optimistically. For 2026, the company forecasts sales growth and a solid operating margin.

Stuttgart. Bosch announced its fiscal year results on Thursday. For the first time since 2009, the foundation-owned group posted red figures, mainly due to losses in Germany. The net loss after taxes amounted to 400 million euros, following a profit of 1.3 billion euros the previous year. The pre-tax result fell to 0.5 billion euros from 2.7 billion euros.

CFO Markus Forschner attributed the weakness to "one-off and special effects beyond the actual business development," including staff reduction costs and tax effects. Bosch has to pay profit taxes in many countries while generating no profits in its home market of Germany. A savings program involving thousands of job cuts aims to address this.

Bosch expressed surprising optimism for 2026. CEO Stefan Hartung plans new products and requires substantial funding, including external capital. Despite geopolitical risks from the Iran war and unpredictable policies by US President Donald Trump, the company anticipates sales growth of two to five percent and an operating margin of four to six percent. This year, lower staff cut burdens are expected to provide relief.

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Boardroom scene of Coupang executives facing Q1 net loss and data breach fallout.
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Coupang swings to Q1 net loss amid data breach fallout

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U.S.-listed e-commerce giant Coupang swung to a net loss in the first quarter amid fallout from a massive customer data breach in South Korea. The company posted a $266 million deficit for January-March, compared with a $114 million profit a year earlier. Founder and Chairman Bom Kim said one-time vouchers and temporary inefficiencies from weaker demand were key factors.

Stuttgart-based sports car maker Porsche reported a first-quarter 2026 net profit of 391 million euros, down nearly 25 percent from the previous year. Revenue fell five percent to 8.4 billion euros. Reasons include high costs for a strategic shift, US tariffs, and declining sales.

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Deutsche Bahn is on course for a profit turnaround after billions in losses, according to CEO Evelyn Palla. This year could end without losses on the bottom line.

Kia Corp. confirmed a 23.5% drop in first-quarter net profit to 1.83 trillion won ($1.2 billion), missing analyst estimates of 1.91 trillion won, due to US import tariffs and a weakening Korean won—issues flagged in pre-earnings forecasts. Sales still hit a record 29.5 trillion won amid 5.3% growth.

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The 40 German companies listed on the DAX reported higher profits in the first quarter. Revenues fell by an average of 3.7 percent, while earnings before interest and taxes rose by 4.4 percent.

Banco do Brasil reported an adjusted net profit of R$3.4 billion for the first quarter of 2026 on Wednesday. The result marks a 54% drop from the same period last year and came in below market forecasts. Rising defaults in agribusiness drove higher provisions and prompted the bank to lower its full-year profit guidance.

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Ermenegildo Zegna Group reported a 1.5% year-on-year decline in revenues for 2025, ending December 31, to €1.92 million. Despite the drop, profit rose 20% and direct-to-consumer sales reached 82% of total revenues. The company highlighted uncertainties from Middle East developments ahead.

 

 

 

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