By Echo Wang

NEW YORK, June 4 (Reuters) - SpaceX told banks in its $75 billion initial ‌public offering that it is set on ‌the $135-a-share price that the firm disclosed on Wednesday in ​its amended IPO filing, sources told Reuters.

The company’s decision is the latest sign that Elon Musk is intent on holding the largest ever initial ‌offering according to ⁠his preferences, upending Wall Street tradition -- though sources stressed that the decision is ⁠subject to change before the IPO takes place. SpaceX didn't immediately respond to a request ​for comment.

SpaceX ​began meeting with investors ​on Thursday in ‌its IPO roadshow – where securities issuers and their bankers typically gather investor feedback before determining the final IPO price at a meeting held a day before the shares begin trading.

Three sources familiar ‌with the roadshow described ​demand as insatiable. Analysts working ​on the IPO ​were fielding as many as 20 ‌calls a day from ​investors, above the ​10 to 15 typically seen on in-demand offerings, one of the sources said.

SpaceX's trading ​debut is ‌expected on Friday, June 12.

(Reporting by Echo ​Wang in New York; editing by Colin ​Barr and David Gaffen)