No real life experince here but what springs to mind:
From a CoG point of view, lowering the rear ride height will reduce weight transfer, slightly increasing the coefficient of friction of the rubber thanks to tyre load sensitivity. A minor change but could be noticable.
Thinking aero, both front and rear angles will be affected equally. I would have thought it unlikely that they are set to the same angle, so the aero balance will change. If your problem is only at high speeds then it does (potentially) point to an aero issue. Don't know how it would effect the undertray but lower rear is less downforce overall. If you need twice the rear angle of the front (for example) for a stable aero balance, e.g. 14 and 7 degrees, if you alter the pitch 2 degrees squat (a lot but just an example) then you have 12 and 5, this is now over double at the rear which should add understeer. Of course aero isn't linear but for small changes it should be near enough to get an idea.
Regarding static camber, you're not running rear camber, but what about front? I'm certainly no tyre expert but with castor and inclination adding camber to the front wheels, assuming camber gain from suspension geometry is equal (a big assumption too), then surely the rears are going to be lacking grip compared to the front (again, assuming you're not getting too much dynamic camber at the front).
From a CoG point of view, lowering the rear ride height will reduce weight transfer, slightly increasing the coefficient of friction of the rubber thanks to tyre load sensitivity. A minor change but could be noticable.
Thinking aero, both front and rear angles will be affected equally. I would have thought it unlikely that they are set to the same angle, so the aero balance will change. If your problem is only at high speeds then it does (potentially) point to an aero issue. Don't know how it would effect the undertray but lower rear is less downforce overall. If you need twice the rear angle of the front (for example) for a stable aero balance, e.g. 14 and 7 degrees, if you alter the pitch 2 degrees squat (a lot but just an example) then you have 12 and 5, this is now over double at the rear which should add understeer. Of course aero isn't linear but for small changes it should be near enough to get an idea.
Regarding static camber, you're not running rear camber, but what about front? I'm certainly no tyre expert but with castor and inclination adding camber to the front wheels, assuming camber gain from suspension geometry is equal (a big assumption too), then surely the rears are going to be lacking grip compared to the front (again, assuming you're not getting too much dynamic camber at the front).