Bosch CEO Stefan Hartung steps down early as company faces deepening crisis
Stefan Hartung, chairman of Bosch’s management board, will step down at the end of June, the company confirmed on Friday, 26 June 2026, ending a tenure that had been extended to 2031 just months earlier. His departure comes as Bosch faces a deepening crisis marked by weak demand, rising costs and sweeping job cuts. Christian Fischer, Hartung’s deputy and long-time Bosch executive, will succeed him immediately, the company announced .
Hartung’s exit is effective 30 June 2026, the company said in a terse statement. The move follows a board decision to accelerate leadership changes amid mounting pressure on profitability and restructuring plans that include significant workforce reductions. Bosch’s owners had renewed Hartung’s contract only in late 2025, extending his mandate until 2031, underscoring the abruptness of the shift .
Industry observers note that Bosch’s troubles reflect broader headwinds in the automotive supply chain, where electrification and shifting OEM strategies have squeezed margins. The company has already initiated cost-cutting measures and plant closures, while reporting red ink for several quarters. “The board concluded that a fresh leadership mandate is necessary to navigate the current challenges,” a person familiar with the decision told the *Handelsblatt* .
Fischer, 58, joined Bosch in 1993 and has held senior roles in powertrain, electronics and corporate strategy. He most recently served as deputy chairman of the management board and head of the Mobility Solutions division. Colleagues describe him as a pragmatic operator with deep operational experience, though his appointment offers no immediate signal of a strategic pivot. “The focus remains on restoring competitiveness and accelerating the transformation,” Fischer said in a brief internal memo obtained by *Reuters* .
The leadership change arrives as Bosch’s supervisory board convenes an emergency session next week to approve the transition and review restructuring milestones. Analysts caution that the abrupt handover risks unsettling investors and customers already grappling with delivery delays and product roadmap uncertainties. “Stability at the top is critical when the business is under strain,” said a Munich-based auto analyst who requested anonymity .
Bosch, headquartered in Gerlingen near Stuttgart, employs roughly 421,000 people worldwide and generated €91.6 billion in revenue in 2025. The company has not disclosed whether Fischer’s appointment includes a revised contract length or performance targets tied to the turnaround plan .
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