Somewhat related to the New Order, as it was based on Hitler's views on foreign policy.
Hitler didn't have any open plans for conquering America, nor how it would be divided. He held complicated views on the country, which he always referred to as the "American Union." To him, it was a weak, mongrel nation, due to it being "half Judaized, the other half negrified" and having just coming out of the Great Depression. However, he also applauded the Jim Crow Laws, Eugenics policies, and the nation's industrial accomplishments, which he applied solely to America's German population. Additionally, due to his love of Karl May novels, he declared the Native Americans to be Honorary Aryans. One of Hitler's most infamous long-term ambitions was to bomb the East Coast, with either conventional or even nuclear weapons.
He also felt that America would become Germany's greatest enemy in the future, and that Britain would eventually side with him against the Americans. Even without Nazi Germany, he was certain that "England and America will one day have a war with one another, which will be waged with the greatest hatred imaginable. One of the two countries will have to disappear."
By contrast, Hitler thought very little of Canada, thought he considered it just as "materialistic, racially bastardized, and decadent" as America, and often lumped the two together as being basically the same. Unfavorably, he also described it as "a nation without a people," compared to Germany being "a people without space." German journalist Colin Ross described Canadian society as artificial due to it being composed of many different parts not bound by either blood or long-standing traditions, and thus Canada had no Volk to speak of, with a mechanical and non-organic political system. Canadians were deemed incapable of comprehending true culture, and German immigration in Canada was considered a mistake due to it being an "empty civilization."
Because of all this, Hitler was certain that, with the potential collapse of the British Empire, America would seize the opportunity to annex Canada, a move that the Canadians would welcome.