ZF Friedrichshafen AG, one of the world's largest automotive suppliers, reported a net loss of €2.1 billion for fiscal year 2025, driven by charges related to the early termination of unprofitable electric mobility projects. Despite the accounting loss, the company exceeded its own guidance on operating profit and cash flow, and reduced its overall debt burden.
Group sales for the year reached €38.8 billion, down from €41.4 billion in 2024 — a nominal decline of around 6 percent. Stripping out currency and acquisition effects, sales grew 0.6 percent organically, reflecting modest resilience in a subdued global market.
The adjusted earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) margin rose to 4.5 percent, up from 3.5 percent in the prior year and above the company's guidance range of 3.0 to 4.0 percent. Adjusted free cash flow climbed to €1.4 billion, well above the €500 million floor the company had indicated and a fourfold improvement over the €305 million recorded in 2024.
The headline loss stems from a one-time charge of approximately €1.6 billion, incurred after ZF agreed with several customers to cancel electric powertrain programs ahead of schedule. The company cited a slower-than-expected market uptake of electric vehicles as the reason those contracts would not have reached required profitability thresholds. The write-down, said CEO Mathias Miedreich, was a deliberate move to remove underperforming commitments from the company's forward portfolio.
"The write-downs on unprofitable projects are a one-off effect on our 2025 balance sheet," Miedreich said at the annual results presentation in Friedrichshafen. "But they remove weight from our backpack for the climb ahead."
Net debt fell by roughly €250 million to €10.2 billion over the course of the year, reflecting both operational cash generation and the company's stated focus on reducing financial liabilities. The equity ratio, however, declined to 13.3 percent from 18.9 percent in 2024, weighed down by the net loss.
Strategic Repositioning and Workforce Reduction
ZF has been undergoing a broad restructuring since announcing plans in mid-2024 to cut between 11,000 and 14,000 jobs in Germany. As of December 31, 2025, total global headcount stood at 153,153, down from 161,631 a year earlier — a reduction of about 5 percent. The German workforce fell by a similar proportion to 49,210. The company said reductions are being achieved through voluntary measures including attrition, severance agreements, partial retirement schemes, and reduced working hours.
A significant transaction in the strategic realignment is the agreed sale of ZF's Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) passenger car business to Harman Inc., a U.S.-based electronics company, at an enterprise value of €1.5 billion. The deal, which remains subject to regulatory approvals, is expected to close in the second half of 2026. ZF said it will retain ADAS capabilities within its commercial vehicles division.
The company also reached an agreement with employee representatives to restructure its Electrified Powertrain Technology Division independently, while keeping it within the ZF group. Operating performance in that division improved year-over-year, the company said, and the restructuring plan is continuing in 2026.
ZF's research and development spending totaled €3.3 billion in 2025, representing 8.6 percent of sales — unchanged from the prior year ratio despite lower overall revenues. The company said this level of R&D intensity places it among Europe's top 20 corporate research investors. Capital expenditure fell to €1.8 billion from €2.3 billion in 2024.
Bond Issuance and Financing
In February 2026, ZF placed a €1 billion bond with a six-year maturity and a 5.5 percent coupon. The company said investor demand was strong, with the order book six times oversubscribed. CFO Michael Frick described the transaction as evidence of capital market confidence in ZF's financial trajectory and said it extended the company's debt maturity profile at a lower interest rate than existing obligations.
Outlook for 2026
ZF does not expect a meaningful recovery in demand in 2026. The company forecasts group sales of more than €38 billion at stable exchange rates — roughly flat with 2025 — and projects an adjusted EBIT margin of 4.0 to 5.0 percent. Adjusted free cash flow, excluding mergers and acquisitions, is expected to exceed €1 billion.
Miedreich used the results presentation to call on European policymakers to revisit fleet-wide carbon dioxide regulation, arguing that greater flexibility — particularly around plug-in hybrid vehicles — was necessary to support the transition to electric mobility without disrupting industrial employment. The company operates 162 production facilities across 29 countries and employs approximately 153,000 people globally.