By Mike Cherney 

Pharmaceutical company Actavis PLC is expected to sell more than $20 billion in bonds as early as this week, a deal that would rank as the second-largest corporate bond ever and further propel bond sales this year into record territory.

Traders expect the bonds to fly off the shelves, with investors globally searching for income-generating investments at a time of low rates on safe government debt. Actavis, which has investment-grade ratings, needs the cash to help pay for its $66 billion purchase of health-care firm Allergan Inc.

The sale would rank behind only a $49 billion debt deal from Verizon Communications Inc. in September 2013 and ahead of $17 billion deals from Medtronic Inc. and Apple Inc. It would also beat out a $10.75 billion sale from Microsoft Corp., which ranks as the largest investment-grade U.S. bond deal this year. Actavis declined to comment.

Overall, investment-grade companies have sold roughly $203 billion of bonds in the U.S. this year, the fastest pace since 2009, recent figures from data provider Dealogic show. Analysts had expected the combination of low rates and an improving U.S. economy, a good sign for corporate earnings, to set the stage for a year of massive bond deals.

"You'll see a nice smorgasbord of offerings across all sectors throughout the month of March," said Ron Quigley, managing director and head of fixed-income syndicate at broker-dealer Mischler Financial Group Inc. "The market remains very positive in here, with rates still very low."

U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds have performed well amid the sales uptick. They have offered a total return, including price changes and interest payments, of 1.99% so far this year, versus the 1.14% total return from the broader U.S. bond market, Barclays data show.

Portfolio managers at Columbia Management said they would consider buying the Actavis bonds. The sale is expected to be so large that it will make up a sizable portion of the benchmark indexes fund managers compare their performance against. "You have to look at it given how big it's going to be in the benchmark," said Tom Murphy, a senior portfolio manager whose Columbia team oversees $27 billion in investment-grade bonds.

Yields on the Actavis bonds have yet to be finalized, though yields on new bonds are based in part off of recent trading. An outstanding 2024 bond from the company recently traded to yield about 3.5%, according to MarketAxess. In comparison, a 10-year U.S. Treasury note recently traded to yield roughly 2%, lower than the 3% at the end of 2013.

The Actavis deal also is expected to do well because of overseas buyers. Government bonds in Europe, which is battling a sluggish economy, are yielding even less than U.S. government debt, luring investors to U.S. markets. Bond yields in Europe could fall even further as the European Central Bank begins buying bonds as part of an economic-stimulus program.

Rates are so low in Europe that some U.S. companies have stepped up debt sales overseas, locking in lower borrowing costs than what they would have achieved in the U.S. Coca-Cola Co. sold EUR8.5 billion ($9.5 billion) last week, the largest euro-denominated offering from a U.S. company.

"You have to feed the beast," said Gary Cloud, who helps oversee the $515 million Hennessy Equity and Income Fund. "There's a lot of beasts that need to be fed. There is an abundance of investible capital in a world where available yields have plunged."

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