Here goes:
I think Comet C/2011 L4 (Panstarrs) would likely be mostly hidden-from-view when it is bright, unless it becomes extremely bright like the famous Comet McNaught or Comet Lovejoy did.
This is because Comet C/2011 L4 (Panstarrs) would remain very close to the Sun from the Earth's point of view for the crucial 4 weeks before and 4 weeks after its date of perihelion passage (11 March 2013).
Brightness wise, based on current magnitude estimates, it would only rise above mag 6 from around 10 Feb 2013 (4 weeks before perihelion), and then fall back below mag 6 after 10 April 2013 (4 weeks after perihelion). See the magnitude graph at Seiichi Yoshida's comet page (link below) as well as the magnitude graph further below which I've obtained from the Comet for Windows program (written by the same Seiichi Yoshida).
http://www.aerith.net/comet/catalog/2011L4/2011L4.html
Right below is a celestial chart showing the positions of the comet and the Sun from 1 Jan 2013 to end June 2013, which I've generated using The Sky6 planetarium software. Have a look at the various dates.
Taking specific points in time, based on data obtained from The Sky6 software:
- On 10 Feb 2013, the comet would be at R.A. 20hr 26m and the Sun would be at R.A. 21hr 36m (i.e. just 1 hr apart). From Singapore, the comet would rise at 6:14am and set at 6:08pm.
- On 01 Mar 2013, the comet would be at R.A. 23hr 25m and the Sun would be at R.A. 22hr 49m (i.e. just half hr apart). From Singapore, the comet would rise at 7:55am and set at 7:53pm.
- On 11 March 2013 (perihelion date), the comet would be at R.A. 00hr 26m and the Sun would be at R.A. 23hr 26m (i.e. exactly 1 hr apart). From Singapore, the comet would rise at 8:15am and set at 8:17pm; sunset would be at 7:17pm, and at that time the comet would be just 14 degrees above the horizon in the west and setting.
- On 25 Mar 2013, the comet would be at R.A. 00hr 37m and the Sun would be at R.A. 00hr 17m (i.e. very very close by). From Singapore, the comet would rise at 7:27am and set at 7:35pm.
- On 10 Apr 2013, the comet would be at R.A. 00hr 30m and the Sun would be at R.A. 01hr 16m (i.e. less than 1 hr apart). From Singapore, the comet would rise at 6:14am and set at 6:29pm.
Based on the above, one might say that the comet stays ‘irritatingly’ close to the Sun for the entire time it is brighter than mag 6, and so won’t be visible as it would be washed out by the glare of the Sun during that time.
I think the only possibility of this comet being worthwhile is if, as said above, it becomes an extremely bright sunset/sunrise comet near its perihelion date (when it would be at 0.3 AU, hardly a sungrazer since that is about 45 million km). Otherwise, us poor Earthlings won’t see much of it when it's bright.

