I don't know, maybe the fucking Spanish Empire?
Britain didn't really have an empire until the 1650s, and even then it only consisted of Jamaica, some territory in India and five plantations in North America. The Spanish and Portugese had been in South, Central and North America since the late 1400s and already had a well-established presence there. The British did indeed have an interest in Central and South America; the Empire essentially began with privateers harassing Spanish ships and fortresses and looting their gold in the name of the Crown. Sir Walter Raleigh even led an expedition to find El Dorado in the early 1600s, which ended with his execution after his son Wat attacked the Spanish despite James I & VI expressly forbidding such an act. By the time the British got into North America properly, they had an established presence in India which they were fighting over with both the fractured Indian government and the French as well as West Africa which allowed a lucrative slave trade. Really, North America was a secondary concern; Jamaica and the West Indies were considered the jewels of the Empire, as well as the exploding tea trade from India circa 1700. Our main interest in America, at the time, was tobacco. Easy to grow, lots of land to attract settlers and indentured labour--as well as slaves--and a native population on the decline due to the introduction of disease. Source: Niall Ferguson's Empire: How Britain Made the Modern World.
Why was the Caribbean considered as jewels when North America was a thousand times bigger with a million times the resources?