Let me see if I can help keep the peace a little.
Charlie is right, but so is Krogen, so please bear with me and I will explain why with an example.
Imagine a perfect set of bullets, all weigh the same and have identical BC, but there is dispersion in muzzle velocity. The day they are shot and tracked all the way to the 1000 yard line, there is no change in the air for the three shots.
This represents a set of bullets on a calm day, where I hope to illustrate the feel of how bullet tracks tend to look statistically at the muzzle, versus down range.
I will use a common Berger 30 cal 175 which happens to be the default case that pops up when you try their ballistic calculator on their web site. It will be used to illustrate the point.
On the left are the muzzle speeds of the three shots. On the right are their speeds at the 1000 yard mark.
You can see how things look by the time they reach the target. By proportion, the stats look smaller to folks when the stars align and the bullets and hardware is classy. So this is the ideal case and it would require lucky winds to make these stat values smaller, but even that has happened.
On a good day, with calm winds, the SD/AVG at the muzzle was a ratio of 30/2650 = 0.0113
On that day at the 1000 yard line, the SD/AVG looks like 14/1177.3 = 0.0119
There is lots of room for the wind to add dispersion, and for the BC to vary, and expand the downrange stats to match the muzzle. But when things are classy and winds are calm, it is not rare to see them as above.
So folks, as someone who has been tracking projectiles (both outbound and inbound) for several decades, the stats down range take a little getting used to, but yes the value at the target can be much smaller than the one at the muzzle and it isn't due to ShotMarker error. YMMV