Transonic performance is hard to predict. A lot of it has to do with bullet design. I see that's getting touched on as I'm typing. Specifically, the common denominator I've seen between **** bullets and good ones at subsonic have to do with where COG was, relative to said bullet.
As far as stability, you want a good stability factor.
A bullet that leave unstable will remain unstable, and when transonic shock waves hit, it'll fly all wonky and backwards.
The caution with longer bullets is that they are more prone to pitching and yaw. However, I have and others have been able to get repeatable results at ranges exceeding 50% distance of transonic via subsonic with long bullets. Like I said, it can be tricky. With dragging out subsonic that far, a matter of atmospheric change can cause dramatic shift in results at times.