Volkswagen is severing its automated driving partnership with Bosch after roughly €1.5 billion in investment failed to yield competitive technology, as the German automaker accelerates a sweeping cost-cutting drive.
Volkswagen plans to end its automated driving tie-up with auto supplier Bosch as part of a broader push to cut costs and boost competitiveness, Germany's Bild newspaper reported Sunday, citing multiple sources. The partnership, launched in 2022 between Volkswagen's software unit Cariad and Bosch, aimed to develop software for driver assistance and autonomous driving systems across Volkswagen's brand portfolio.
"The project did not meet expectations," Bild reported, citing internal assessments that found the technology was not yet competitive after approximately €1.5 billion ($1.71 billion) had been invested. Bosch and Cariad issued a joint statement acknowledging their long-standing collaboration, saying they "regularly review our development partnership and continuously assess whether it aligns with our strategic and technological goals as well as current market developments." The companies declined to comment on confidential partner discussions.
The partnership is scheduled to end according to contractual terms, with final termination not expected before Monday, Bild said. Volkswagen plans to source hardware and software for automated driving systems from a new partner, with a replacement currently being selected and a contract planned by September. The Bild report follows news Friday that Volkswagen is considering shutting four German factories and cutting as many as 100,000 jobs as Europe's largest automaker grapples with high costs and intensifying competition from Tesla and Chinese EV makers such as BYD.
Competitive Pressure Mounts
The dissolution of the Bosch partnership leaves Volkswagen's autonomous driving timeline in question at a moment when rivals are accelerating. Tesla's Full Self-Driving system, while still requiring driver supervision, has accumulated billions of miles of real-world data. Chinese competitors including BYD and Xpeng have integrated advanced driver-assistance features into mass-market vehicles priced well below Volkswagen's premium models. BYD's "God's Eye" system, launched earlier this year, offers highway navigation assist on vehicles starting at roughly $15,000 — a price point Volkswagen cannot match with its current cost structure.
Volkswagen shares fell 3.88% on Friday to close at €75.55, extending year-to-date losses as investors digest the broader restructuring plan. The company trades at roughly 4.5x forward earnings, a discount to Stellantis at 5.2x and a steep discount to Tesla at 85x, reflecting the market's skepticism about Volkswagen's ability to execute its technology transition while cutting costs.
For Bosch, losing a marquee automated driving client represents a strategic setback. The supplier had positioned the Volkswagen partnership as a cornerstone of its mobility technology strategy, competing with the likes of Mobileye, Qualcomm's Snapdragon Ride platform, and Nvidia's Drive Thor system. Bosch will now need to find alternative customers to recoup its share of the €1.5 billion investment.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.