I'm thinking the pressures generated on this stuff are within European specs.
I have seen this before, when people used to shooting North American commercial loads, usually around 150 grain at 40,000 psi got ahold of a box of Norma Oryx or brown box loaded to European standards. Even some of the WWII surplus, which was loaded to 48,000 psi with all different weights came as a stout surprise.
198 grain bullets doing 2500 fps are right on up there with HOT 338-06 and 35 Whelan loads. Not magnum pressures but definitely not pleasant to shoot from the bench.
I picked up a box of 20 from Canada Ammo, if this is what you're talking about, and found the recoil to be unpleasant off the shoulder while standing and brutal off the bench bags.
I didn't have any issues with spit necks or stretching and if the brass weren't Berdan primed, I would have saved it to reload. I know it isn't that much more effort to reload once you learn how but I have a lot of 8x57 boxer primed brass on hand and it just isn't worth the extra effort. Also, the price of this surplus is much higher than I can reload for. It isn't worth the effort for me to break it down and reassemble it. It's going to kick like a mule, even with lower pressures. Launching 198 grain bullets out of an 8mm bore requires impressive thrust to make it usable at ranges beyond 100yds. Mind you it's plinking ammo, not hunting or match grade ammo, so lightening up the powder charge to get manageable recoil and hopefully good accuracy out to 200 yds may be a good option.