Not according to the ballistic Engineers whom I know and trust (there are only three IMO. Vaughn. Childs and Rinker) and not according to McCoy nor to any testing evidence. I once asked Harold Vaughn in person "should I test bullets for stability at 50yds and should I shy away from bullets that may take longer to go to sleep" and his reply was a derisive snort ......
"kid, I would have to teach you for a WEEK just to put that stupid question into perspective so short answer.... "NO!!! "stability" has NO MEASURABLE EFFECT on ballistic coefficient!!"
"And in any case, IF IT DID you cannot make "vary the BC of a group of bullets" enough to be measurable at 1000 yds." Now I'm not gonna' get into the 1000yd effects of "variable BC" because there are still beaucoup 1K shooters modifying their bullets and en masse they could take me.
So I'll just set that one out
But here's the real kicker..... here's the logical reason it CANNOT be some mystical stability thing......
BC/"stability"/flight path differences/flight time differences would make your group into LUCK!
It's NOT luck, it's a repeatable, reproducible and predictable phenomenon.
Your situation is quite simply a gravity drop over time problem and no matter how much you "change BC" you cannot in any way force the numbers to account for your experience. The bullets all timed the same and dropped the same....
The reason your bullets landed where they did is because the barrel BENT to put them there.