Some QDs do affect a solvent-action on some LSPs under some conditions. Yeah, there are a lot of qualifiers in that statement, but I've had it happen/not. Fortunately the "not" is much more common. Some examples to watch out for:
M34 has killed off an already almost-dead coat of Souveran, requiring me to redo the vehicle. A different QD woulda helped that LSP hang on until the next wash, shoulda used something like Griot's SpeedShine instead. BTW, the SpeedShine is utterly Accumulator-proof, always.
QuikShine has left *very* light pseudo-holograms when used on layered 476S, but note that layering 476S can sometimes be problematic anyhow. Still, it happened with that QD on long-cured 476S and it has never happened not with the other QDs I used on that vehicle/LSP combo. Fortunately they were so light that nobody else would've ever spotted them, and they went away with a quick wash.
FK425 has left *serious* (and I mean OMG-awful) pseudo-holograms that I couldn't buff away, also on Collinite 476S. This was on a *severely* compromised paintjob (my beater-Audi) and I suspect that the paint's pitting/microfissures/other issues held residual/excess wax that was then affected by some solvent-action from the FK425. It was an absolute mess; I fixed it with an application of 845 (which, IME, is a good fix for most any pseudo-hologram issue involving 476S). That incident was so terrible that I've quit using FK425 on waxes, reserving it for use on sealants (yeah, yeah, I know... and I never had any problems with it messing up waxes before, but I'm not gonna go through that again, ever).