The amount of light that hits the film, or in your case the meter, is affected by how far the lens is from the film. The further you extend your bellows to focus the camera on nearby subjects, the less intensity of light your meter will see. Your meter in your sony and your booster should only match up exactly if your camera is focused at infinity, with the minimum possible bellows draw.
There is a formula you can use to calculate the bellows extension factor of your setup. You measure the bellows extension, divide that by the focal length of your lens, square that figure and finally take the log base 2.
log2((Be/f)^2)
That will tell you how many stops of exposure you are losing to your bellows extension.
If you omit the last step, the log2, you get the value of how many times longer the exposure measured by your booster should be than the exposure measured by your sony.
One of the great advantages of a meter like your booster is that it automatically accounts for bellows factor because it's reading is made with the bellows extended. People using other types of meters have to do all that math I just mentioned every time they want to take a picture or else their photos will come out underexposed.