I am not sure you understand concentricity, and runout.
If the guide bore and guide of are not in the same plane, it is out of concentric.
Stock guides should be very good, most after market are too. Sometimes cheap ones are not.
You can check your new guides sort of, put them on a clamped valve, place dial indicator on outside of guide, the roll it around one turn. Try that two places, on the portion that sits in the head.
If it's zero or very low run out, then its very concentric.
If the new and the old had really low runout, then the valve with new guide will sit in near the same spot, but because the old guides had a lot of play, the guide contact area is likely a stretched circle.
So a bit of material has to come off the seat to get a good seal.
Oversize guides generally are needed because the hole gets compromised.
So depending on how you remove them std may be good, some use .001 to be safe.
If you did not need the oversize it Nat tighten up clearance and need resizing.. and that is a whole new can of worms..
I hope that explains it somewhat.