On RFC there is an ongoing and extensive thread that was begun in mid-2018 that compares many different ammos. Fifty rounds (a whole box) is tested at a time. While it includes a considerable number of CCI s varieties, 17 of them in all, some of them tested more than once, unfortunately it does not include the same CCI Subsonic HP ammo rated on the box at 1050 fps MV in question here. The thread from which the following information is taken, and which includes information for many varieties of match ammo as well as others, can be found here h t t p s://www.rimfirecentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1129343
CCI SV, MV rated at 1070 fps, was chronographed twice. The ES figures were 73 fps (high of 1092, low 1019) and 85 fps (high 1103, low 1018). Its one of the manufacturer's "Target and Plinking" varieties,
CCI Green Tag, which is one of the manufacturer's "Competition" varieties, has an MV rated at 1070 fps. Its ES was 104 fps (high 1152, low 1048).
CCI Pistol Match, another of the "Competition" varieties, also has an MV rated at 1070 fps. Its ES was 73 fps (high 1103, low 1030).
The best CCI product tested on the RFC thread appears to be CCI SGB, a 1235 fps box rated MV round with a flat point lead bullet. Its ES was 37 fps (high 1268, low 1231).
To add some perspective, some of the best ES figures achieved were with expensive match ammo. These included the likes of Eley Tenex, for example, which was tested three times in all. ES figures were 18 fps in one test, 45 fps in another, and 35 fps in a third. Eley Match was tested twice, with an ES of 17 fps in one test and 32 fps in another.
Of course Tenex and Match are expensive. Many shooters use Lapua Center X ammo, which is a little more affordable. Its ES results over two tests were 38 fps and 44 fps.
It is important to remember that these figures were obtained with the particular lots of ammo that were chronographed. Different lots will produce different results. This is true for all rimfire ammo. Some will have a lower ES than others, some will be higher. No one can know until what it will be until ammo from a lot in question is tested, and in statistically significant numbers. What that means is that any five or ten randomly selected rounds may have a very low ES or it might not. When 50 rounds are tested, a fuller picture of what's possible over a whole box becomes a little more clear.