There is no advantage to fermenting a white kit at a low temperature. The purpose of low temperature fermentation for whites is to preserve delicate florals and other notes. These are destroyed at higher temps. Kits are pasteurized at 160°, so the delicate fragrances are destroyed in that process. If you're making white wines from grapes, you can preserve these aromas if you pick the grapes when cold and maintain a cold temperature throughout the entire process.
The following is from winemakermag.com, article by Tim Vandergritt
While it’s true that some white wines benefit from cool fermentation, that’s a very small percentage of wines that are made. The idea behind keeping it cool is that the very most delicate and volatile aromas (from very low-weight molecular compounds) which contribute that top 1% of the aromatic nose of a wine can be blown off of a fermentation that is too vigorous or too warm. But this only applies to grapes that have been picked cold, transported cold, crushed cold, and kept cold at every single step of the way. Let it warm up for even a short time and those low-weight molecular compounds are simply gone.
Consider a wine kit for a moment. The fruit is picked cold, of course: hot grapes oxidize quickly and the juice spoils. Pressed cold, sure — nobody heats a press or puts it anywhere but in the shade. Also pumped, transported and blended cold, as this keeps down spoilage at every step of the way. But at some point the juice is going to go through a pasteurizer and hit 160 °F (75 °C) before being cooled back down for packaging. You can see where this breaks down the whole cold-alla-time ideal.
https://winemakermag.com/article/813-maintaining-fermentation-temperatures-wine-kits
Being as new as I am to this I feel a little funny with this response, but here goes:
Tim Vandergritt, although I am not questioning his intregrity, is an advocate of kit wine making. All kit directions push you to bottle before it's time and take all precautions to assure the beginning winemaker a successful fermentation. If you read through the article almost all reference is made toward kits. He also references not hydrating the yeast because you might not do it properly which is another reference to a new winemaker. Grape wines aren't proceessed like kit juice leading to his cold fermentation is not advantageous comments as well as this slows down the process and goes back to bottling before it's time. It's hard for me to imagine a winery would go through the expense of buying chilled stainless steel fermentation tanks if there wasn't a benefit fermenting whites at a cooler temperature.