After shutting down production at nearly 100 Bosch locations worldwide this month, the company is systematically preparing for a gradual ramp-up of manufacturing. “We want to ensure reliable supplies to meet our customers’ demand as it gradually returns, with a view to helping the world economy recover as quickly as possible,” said Dr. Volkmar Denner, chairman of the board of management of Robert Bosch GmbH, at the company’s annual press conference. “Our goal is to synchronize the ramp-up of production and secure supply chains, especially in automotive production. We have already achieved this in China, where our 40 or so local plants are producing again and the supply chains are stable. We are working hard to do the same in our other regions.” To make a success of ramping up production, Denner said that the company is putting numerous measures in place to ensure that associates are adequately protected against coronavirus infection. Bosch is also committed to taking a coordinated, joint approach with customers, suppliers, authorities, and employee representatives.
Helping contain the coronavirus pandemic
“Wherever possible, we want to contribute our expertise to efforts to contain the pandemic, for instance through our newly developed rapid Covid-19 test and our Vivalytic analysis device,” Bosch CEO Denner said. “Demand is huge. We’re doing everything we can to significantly increase production, and will increase capacity five-fold over our original plans by the end of the year,” he continued. Bosch intends to produce more than a million rapid tests in 2020, and to increase this to three million next year.In addition to existing laboratory tests, the Vivalytic analysis device is to be used initially in hospitals and doctors’ offices, where it will be used primarily to protect medical staff, for whom the rapid availability of test results in less than two-and-a-half hours is crucial. The rapid test is already being delivered to European customers with a “research use only” label, and can be used following validation. Bosch expects to have a CE mark for the product by the end of May. An even faster test, which can reliably detect Covid-19 cases in less than 45 minutes, is in the final stages of development. “All our work in this field is guided by our ‘Invented for life’ ethos,” Denner said.
Bosch has already started production of face masks. Even now, thirteen Bosch plants in nine countries – from Bari in Italy, to Bursa in Turkey, to Anderson in the United States – have taken the initiative and are making such masks for local requirements. In addition, the company is currently setting up two fully automatic production lines at its Stuttgart-Feuerbach location with further lines to follow at its German Erbach location as well as in India and Mexico. “It took our special-purpose machinery unit just a few weeks to design the necessary machinery,” Denner said. Bosch has also made the designs available to other companies free of charge. This means the company will be able to manufacture more than 500,000 masks per day. The masks are intended to protect Bosch associates at plants worldwide. Furthermore, the aim is to make them available to third parties as well. This will depend on gaining the appropriate country-specific approvals. In addition, Bosch is producing 5,000 liters of disinfectant each week in Germany and the U.S. for its associates in American and European plants. “Our people are doing great work here,” Denner said.
Global economic development in 2020: recession negatively affecting outlook
In view of the coronavirus pandemic, Bosch anticipates considerable challenges for the global economy in the current business year: “We are bracing ourselves for a global recession that will also have a considerable impact on our own performance in 2020,” said Prof. Stefan Asenkerschbaumer, CFO and deputy chairman of the Bosch board of management. Based on the effects known to date, Bosch currently expects automotive production to fall by at least 20 percent in 2020. In the first quarter of this year, Bosch Group sales fell by 7.3 percent, meaning they are already considerably lower year on year. Sales dropped by 17 percent in March 2020 alone. Given the many imponderables, the company felt unable to make a forecast for the year as a whole. “A supreme effort must be made to achieve at least a balanced result,” the CFO said. “In this severe crisis, it is again an advantage for us that we are so diversified, with different business sectors.”
Carbon-neutral economy: new advisory company established
When it comes to climate action, Bosch is taking two new approaches to ensure its own efforts have a multiplier effect in the economy. One goal is to make upstream and downstream activities along the value chain as climate neutral as possible, from “purchased goods” to “use of products sold.” By 2030, the associated emissions (Scope 3) are expected to fall by 15 percent, or more than 50 million metric tons per year. To this end, Bosch has agreed on a target with the Science-Based Targets initiative, making Bosch the first automotive supplier to commit to a measurable target. Moreover, the company plans to pool the knowledge of nearly 1,000 Bosch experts worldwide and experience from more than 1,000 energy-efficiency projects of its own in a new advisory company, called Bosch Climate Solutions. Explaining this step, Denner said: “We want to make our experience available to other companies, to help them progress to carbon neutrality,”
Growth market for Europe: venturing into the hydrogen economy
“Climate action remains crucial for humanity’s survival. It costs money, but doing nothing will cost even more,” Denner said. “Politics must not stand in the way of companies expanding their ingenuity and using technology to benefit the environment – without harming prosperity.” According to Denner, what is important is a broad technology offensive that not only sets out a battery-electric path to sustainable mobility, but also takes into consideration efficient combustion engines and especially renewable synthetic fuels and fuel cells. The Bosch CEO called for a bold move into the hydrogen economy and the production of renewable synthetic fuels once the coronavirus crisis has passed. In his view, this is the only way Europe can become climate-neutral by 2050. “Today’s hydrogen applications need to make it out of field testing and into the real economy,” Denner said. He appealed to policymakers to support the necessary technologies: “This will enable us to achieve even ambitious climate targets.”
Ready for hydrogen: mobile and stationary fuel cells
Climate action is accelerating structural change in many sectors. “Hydrogen is becoming increasingly important, both in the automotive industry and in building technology. Bosch is very well prepared for this,” Denner said. Bosch and its partner Powercell are already working to commercialize mobile fuel-cell stacks for use in vehicles. Their market launch is planned for 2022. This is how Bosch intends to position itself successfully in another growth market: As early as 2030, one in eight newly registered heavy trucks could be powered by a fuel cell. Bosch is working with its partner Ceres Power on stationary fuel cells. These can supply buildings such as computing centers with electricity. Bosch anticipates that the market for fuel-cell power stations will be worth more than 20 billion euros by 2030.
Powertrain and heating technology: electrification of the product portfolio
Business year 2019: steadfast in a weak market environment
“Against the backdrop of a further weakening of the global economy and a 5.5 percent decline in automotive production, the Bosch Group held up well in 2019,” Asenkerschbaumer said. Thanks to a variety of successful products, sales totaled 77.7 billion euros, only 0.9 percent below the previous year’s level; adjusted for exchange-rate effects, they fell by 2.1 percent. The Bosch Group generated earnings from operations before interest and taxes (EBIT from operations) of 3.3 billion euros. This means it achieved an EBIT margin from operations of 4.2 percent. Excluding extraordinary positive effects arising especially from the divestment of the packaging machinery business, the margin was 3.5 percent. “In addition to heavy upfront investments, the factors weighing on result were in particular the weak state of markets such as China and India, the further reduction in demand for diesel cars, and high restructuring costs, particularly in the mobility segment,” CFO Asenkerschbaumer said. With an equity ratio of 46 percent and cash flow of 9 percent of sales in 2019, Bosch’s financial situation is sound. Expenditure on research and development rose to 6.1 billion euros, or 7.8 percent of sales. At roughly 5 billion euros, capital expenditure was up slightly year on year.
Business year 2019: development by business sector
Despite the decline in global automotive production, the Mobility Solutions business sector generated sales of 46.8 billion euros. Revenues were 1.6 percent lower year on year, or 3.1 percent after adjusting for exchange-rate effects. This means that the Bosch sector with the highest sales outperformed global production volumes. The EBIT margin from operations stood at 1.9 percent of sales. Business in the Consumer Goods business sector picked up during the year. Sales totaled 17.8 billion euros, which equates to a drop of 0.3 percent, or 0.8 percent after adjusting for exchange-rate effects. At 7.3 percent of sales, the EBIT margin from operations is lower year on year. The Industrial Technology business sector felt the effects of the declining machinery market, but still increased its sales by 0.7 percent to 7.5 billion euros; after adjusting for exchange-rate effects, this was a slight drop of 0.4 percent. Excluding the non-recurring extraordinary effect from the sale of the Packaging Technology division, the EBIT margin from operations was 7 percent of sales. Revenues in the Energy and Building Technology business sector rose 1.5 percent to 5.6 billion euros, or by 0.8 percent after adjusting for exchange-rate effects. This equates to an EBIT margin from operations of 5.1 percent of sales.
Business year 2019: development by region
Bosch’s business performance varied from region to region in 2019. In Europe , sales were 40.8 billion euros, 1.4 percent down on the previous year, or an exchange rate-adjusted 1.2 percent. In North America , revenues increased by 5.9 percent (only 0.6 percent after adjusting for exchange-rate effects) to 13 billion euros. In South America , sales increased by 0.1 percent to 1.4 billion euros, but by 6 percent after adjusting for exchange-rate effects. Business in Asia Pacific (including Africa) reflected the collapse of automotive production in India and China: sales declined by 3.7 percent to 22.5 billion euros, an exchange rate-adjusted drop of 5.4 percent.
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