Expansion should be seen as 'pre-expansion' or 'pre-seating', and is beneficial toward lower loaded TIR, consistent seating force(for consistent seating depths) and better tension consistency.The neck shoulder area of the brass is the most vulnerable to change. Expanding with the use of a ball or a push in expanded can do more harm than good. The case is not supported with the die . Consistent neck tension is done with neck thickness and elasticity of the brass - And or annealing.
Larry
For tension, consider that tension is merely spring back against seated bullet bearing. Spring back is counter to last sizing action. That is, if your last sizing was inward, by quite a bit, spring back will be biased outward quite a bit(and we all know spring back varies).
Where you pre-expand with a mandrel(which is better for this than bullets) spring back is biased inward(more toward gripping). This spring back, either direction, continues over time until reaching lowest energy balance(part of the variance).
Now if you down size normally, spring back will open necks a small bit. If you follow with less expanding(than down sizing) you consume remaining down sizing energy and leave relatively less inward spring back energy out of balance. It's like halving the energy variance twice, to 1/4 that of down sizing alone.
It is possible to manage truly consistent neck tension without ever annealing, and this is a keystone action in that. This plan, including other actions, provides for much higher neck tension that is as consistent as process annealed.
There you have it, the tension advantage in neck pre-expansion.