Apparentely it's signed seal and going to be delivered, according to BBC Sport:
Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has done a deal to invest in Liverpool, according to a government spokesman.
Thaksin said on Monday that he was on the verge of buying a 30% stake in the Anfield club for a reported £65m.
And he made a cabinet announcement on Tuesday, said government spokesman Jakrapob Penkair, who added: "We will buy it in the name of Thailand."
Thaksin said he could not give any more details, pending a formal announcement at an undisclosed time in the future.
The Thai PM, who was a telecoms tycoon before he moved into politics, is estimated to be worth $800m and is believed to be ready to invest in the Premiership club in an attempt to cash in on their popularity in Asia.
"We've talked and now it's just up to Liverpool and then we'll be able to make an announcement," he said before adding that the deal was "not too expensive".
Thaksin revealed that a company formed with other Thai private investors to pump money into the club would receive commercial rights to use the Liverpool brand and that a football academy would be set up in Thailand.
His spokesman, Chakrapot Penkai, believes the deal will be mutually beneficial.
"Thailand thinks that the Liverpool team can enhance the standard of the sport's development in Thailand a great deal," he told BBC Radio Four's Today programme.
"Why does the prime minister want to invest in Liverpool? Because it is the era of the brand name and with a good quality brand name you can do many things.
"Liverpool's name is a world-class name - people attach their fantasies, their liking for sports, their enhancement in life, their self-development, along with this kind of team."
Reds chairman David Moores and Liverpool chief executive Rick Parry have been in Bangkok working on the deal.
And the Thai fan club's president, Boonchai Mongkolratankorn, said all Liverpool supporters would be happy that marketing merchandise in Asia would help buy new players.
"The prime minister shouldn't have anything to do with management of the club but I think he wants a say in buying and selling players," Boonchai said.
"I'm not sure if the prime minister is really a Liverpool fan," he added. "He says he is but when Manchester United were here, he said he supported them."