Bosch to Pay $36M to US for Unauthorized Shipments to Huawei

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Robert Bosch GmbH just wrote a $36 million check to the US government. The reason: the German engineering conglomerate spent four years shipping sensor technology and automotive software to Huawei without bothering to get the required export licenses.

The settlement, reached with the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), covers more than 100 unauthorized shipments worth over $72.4 million. Those shipments included Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) sensor products and automotive software, all sent to Huawei Technologies and its affiliates between September 16, 2020, and September 26, 2024.

What Bosch actually did

Huawei has been on the US Entity List since 2019, which means any company wanting to ship certain products to the Chinese telecom giant needs a specific license from BIS.

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Bosch’s subsidiaries, including Bosch Sensortec GmbH and ETAS GmbH, apparently didn’t get that memo. Or chose to ignore it. Either way, the shipments kept flowing for four years across more than 100 separate occasions.

The civil penalty totals $36,184,680. On top of that, Bosch agreed to disgorge approximately $11.43 million in pre-tax profits linked to the unauthorized transactions. The Department of Justice, however, offered a partial credit and suspension tied to the BIS penalty, largely because Bosch cooperated and disclosed the violations on its own.

And in what might be the most consequential detail for corporate America, the DOJ declined to pursue criminal prosecution entirely, citing the absence of aggravating factors. This marks the first declination under the DOJ’s newly established Corporate Enforcement Policy, a framework designed to reward companies that self-report violations and cooperate with investigators.

Bosch, for its part, didn’t just write checks. The company added 66 new employees to its trade compliance organization and overhauled its internal policies.

What this means for investors

The $72.4 million in unauthorized shipments generated only about $11.43 million in pre-tax profits for Bosch. After paying the $36 million penalty and disgorgement, plus the cost of 66 new compliance hires, those Huawei shipments turned out to be a spectacularly bad deal.

For companies in the automotive and technology sectors, particularly those with supply chains touching China, the Bosch settlement is a case study in both risk and risk mitigation. The fact that voluntary self-disclosure and genuine compliance investment led to a DOJ declination creates a clear incentive structure.

Bosch is a Stuttgart-based company with roughly 420,000 employees worldwide, and it still had to answer to Washington. Any firm shipping products that incorporate US-origin technology, or that are subject to the Export Administration Regulations, can find itself in BIS’s crosshairs regardless of where it’s headquartered.

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